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My chat with the head of Hilton Honors about their radical changes

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Hilton Honors will make a major announcement today about changes to the programme which will take effect this Spring, starting later this month.

I spoke with the head of Hilton Honors last night and we talked through the changes for half an hour.  The devil is in the detail, of course, but on the face of it – at least in the short term – it seems positive.

(First change – the second ‘H’ has gone from what was Hilton HHonors!)

Hilton_Honors new logo

This is the big change – Hilton is introducing a radical version of ‘points and money’ which is unlike anything else we’ve seen.

There are two elements to this and it is easier to explain if I look at them separately.

Firstly, for every standard room redemption, you will be able to pick a combination of cash and points.  This will be driven by the points value and the Hilton HHonors member cash rate.

Let’s assume that a particular hotel is selling for 50,000 points or £200.  You will be able to pick any combination of the two as long as you use at least 5,000 points.  You can pay 50,000 points or £200 or 25,000 points + £100 or 5,000 points + £180 etc.

The key reason for doing this is to allow members with small points balances to get some value from their points.  A key secondary reason, I think, is to drive more direct bookings rather than via Expedia etc, since obviously you can’t use this facility via a third party.  This may turn out to be smart – it is similar to what BA has done with ‘part pay with Avios’.

Here is the second change.

The maximum points price for a room will be no higher than it is today.  However, off peak points prices will fall sharply.  This effectively puts a floor under the value you will get for a Hilton point.

You will remember in our review of the Gran Hotel Montesol yesterday that it was selling for 95,000 points or €600 in August but 95,000 points or €270 in May.  Under the new system, it will remain 95,000 points in August but the May price will fall to, I imagine, something around 50,000 points.  You will then be able to pick your preferred combination of 50,000 points, €270 or something inbetween.

So far, so good.  I honestly cannot see any downside in the short term.

The risk is in the long term.  Hilton is scrapping redemption categories entirely.  Whilst Gran Hotel Montesol, picture above, will have a maximum price of 95,000 points this year, there is no reason why it cannot quietly drift out to 120,000 or 150,000 points next year.  Without any category caps to act as a constraint, it could easily happen and before you know it you have a purely revenue based redemption system on your hands.

I doubt Hilton would do this, because I think it understands the value of offering ‘outsized’ redemptions at various hotels (such as Montesol in August), but the risk is there.

There are other changes coming too:

free points pooling amongst friends and family

the option for selected Diamond members to pause their membership for a year for any reason, possibly during a period of redundancy, changed travel patterns, maternity leave etc

for US members, the option to redeem points for merchandise from amazon.com

These changes are further down the line.  The move to ‘points and money’ redemptions will take place first, in late February.

For probably the first time ever following a scheme change, I am not encouraging members to burn their points quickly.

The only thing that gets worse is that the current ‘points and money’ redemptions – which were not often available – are being scrapped and replaced with the new system.  If you were looking at a ‘points and money’ reward then I would make sure you book that over the next 3 weeks or so.

The rest of us can wait to see how the new model unfolds.  An off-peak example I was shown gave a value per point of 0.5p – if that is really where it ends up, and remembering that you would be able to get that value on any standard room on any night – then the scheme will be much improved.

I will write more on this in the coming days when I have seen the official details.


How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Hilton Honors points from UK credit and debit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

There are two dedicated Hilton Honors debit cards. These are especially attractive when spending abroad due to the 0% or 0.5% FX fee, depending on card.

You also receive FREE Hilton Honors status for as long as you hold the debit cards – Gold status with the Plus card and Silver status with the basic card. This is a great reason to apply even if you rarely use it.

We reviewed the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here and the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

You can apply for either card here.

NEW: Hilton Honors Plus Debit

10,000 bonus points, Hilton Gold status and NO FX fees Read our full review

NEW: Hilton Honors Debit

2,500 bonus points, Hilton Silver status and 0.5% FX fees Read our full review

There is another way of getting Hilton Honors status, and earning Hilton Honors points, from a payment card.

Holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Hilton Honors Gold status for as long as they hold the card.  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton Honors points is 1:2.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Hilton Honors points.

Comments (160)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • mark2 says:

    The number of points already varied by season at some hotels, but the points and cash everywhere is a big step forward.
    I think the free transfer of points will be a major step forward; I was moving to Marriott to get this although my business will be unnoticeable to any hotel chain.
    It will be interesting to see the full T&C as it sounds very generous. I would have thought that the vast number of points which are sold but never used would be the main profit earner.

    • Genghis says:

      Sold and then the buyer let’s them expire would be very profitable for Hilton. Sold and then kept alive means the points will stay on the H Group BS as a liability. Perhaps they want to unwind this liability?

      • Rob says:

        Apparently Blue members have 15 billion unredeemed points.

        By making points more useful in small quantities, it is another reason to book direct in order to earn them. This is all linked to ‘don’t use Expedia’.

        Obviously if the chains hadn’t agreed to pay Expedia etc 25% commission in the first place, as opposed to the usual 10%, none of this would be happening. The airlines decided to stop commission payments (pretty much) to everyone but the hotel groups are not strong enough.

        • Kathy says:

          At the moment there’s literally nothing I can do with around 5000 Hilton points, so I fully understand that! I got the credit card for the free Night voucher but haven’t stayed in a Hilton since I used it, and with my credit card spend better directed elsewhere I’d never earn enough for a decent redemption.

          This change will definitely make me use the Hilton credit card between Amex churns, as I’ll actually have a use for the points!

  • Alan says:

    The lack of caps really worries me about long term value – although we can see the benefit of outsized value on redemptions those will be the ones where they end up paying hotels the most, so I can see them rapidly wanting to curtail them…

  • Mike says:

    These are not good enhancements.

    Time to make those points bookings before all the rates increase.

    Bad, bad news.

    • Rob says:

      You are fine in the short term. I only worry about the long term.

      • Alan says:

        Or, being pessimistic, the medium term! I stayed for 3 nights at the Palmer House, Chicago in November when it was off-peak. Cost 50k points per night despite room rates starting at $400+tax/night thanks to a conference that was on. Under the new system my suspicion is that they’ll no longer have these off peak rates and only the peak redemption cap, I therefore suspect my redemption cost would have shot up (due to the high cash rates) to the maximum peak rate for that property (I’d imagine 80k or so).

  • M HOCKENHULL says:

    Regarding lower rates at certain horels in low seasons the ones Ive used before in York and Edinburgh just dont have off seasons, they are constantly at peak. I am also worried about the scrapping of the hotel grades as the ammount of points I manage to collect only ever got me rooms at the low grade ones in Sheffield, Newcastle etc

  • Genghis says:

    Cheers Anon. Will register when it opens.

  • Graeme says:

    O/T but hotel related and a few people have been asking about this…

    Iggy points may finally have appeared, my IHG account has 1,500 with a reference of IHGRC – Corporate. This has nothing to do with my accelerate target so could be them..

    • Fastbowler says:

      My IHG account is now showing 2500 points also with reference IHGRC – Corporate presumably from Where’s Iggy promotion.

      • North says:

        Can’t remember but do the Iggy points extend the points expiry date? My husband has some points due to expire and he’s due some Iggy points.

      • Gavin says:

        Yes also posted thankfully.

      • RussellH says:

        Yes, I was credited late yesterday with 1 000 pts under the same rubrik. The Accelerate page was working again, finally, yesterday evening, but none of the points for completed tasks credited yet.

    • Anon says:

      Finally got my 2500 last night

  • Alan says:

    Thanks, Anon – have registered 🙂

  • Robbie says:

    This isn’t all that radical, Melia hotels have had this for at least a year (Which is when I started using them) I know they aren’t as relevant in the UK as Hilton but you can use any combination of points upto 100% and it sounds pretty much the same only theirs starts from 2,000 points – and they give you 2,000 points just from signing up so everyone has a chance for a discount.

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