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Why I think Hilton Honors points may be getting more valuable

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As we covered extensively on Head for Points in February, Hilton Honors underwent a substantial restructuring which totally changed the value basis of the scheme.

You can now use Hilton Honors points to get a free room OR to get a cash discount on a room.  The minimum number of points you need is just 5,000.

The big question we all had was what value Hilton would put on a point.  I made three mid-range UK Hilton bookings this week which show that the value you get can be OK.

This has an impact on how you judge the value of Amex Membership Rewards points (from an Amex Gold or Amex Platinum) and the UK Hilton Honors Platinum Visa card.

Of the three UK Hilton rooms I booked this week, for stays over the next fornight, this is what I got:

Room 1 – £63.70 or 17,000 Hilton Honors points – value per point 0.37p

Room 2 – £83.30 or 31,000 Hilton Honors points – value per point 0.27p

Room 3 – £78.40 or 21,000 Hilton Honors points – value per point 0.37p

This is the thesis I am using for the rest of this article:

Because you can redeem as few as 5,000 Hilton points for a cash discount, because there are no availability constraints and because the room is treated as a revenue room (you earn stay credit, bonus points etc), Hilton Honors points are now closer to being treated as cash than they used to be.

Gran Hotel Montesol Curio Hilton Ibiza exterior

Before February, when you needed at least 30,000 Hilton points to get a free room in any major tourist destination (unless you wanting a romantic weekend in Sheffield, where the Hampton was always 10,000) – and only then if there was reward availability – you certainly couldn’t treat them as anything like cash.  You can now use as few as 5,000 points and you don’t need ‘all points’ reward availability to use them, so as long as you are paying for hotels on a regular basis then they are certainly more ‘cash-like’ than they were.

This means that American Express Membership Rewards points and the Hilton Honors Platinum Visa card now become more valuable.

The Hilton Honors Platinum Visa credit card is free and gives you 2 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent.  If it turns out that 0.37p per point of value is going to be generally available (and that isn’t yet certain, it is still early days) then the Hilton card gets you 0.74% of your spending back.  That is a very good result given the poor return on most free or low-fee Visa and MasterCard products these days.

American Express Membership Rewards points transfer to Hilton Honors at a rate of 1:2.  This means, again, that you’re getting 0.74p per Amex point based on the value I got from Room 1 and Room 3 I booked this week.  This is not as good as transferring your Amex points into Avios or other frequent flyer miles, but it is far better than using them for gift cards etc where you get 0.4p to 0.5p of value.  For someone with only a small Amex points balance, Hilton Honors becomes one of the best low balance redemptions – just 2,500 Amex points gets you the minimum 5,000 Hilton points required to get a cash discount on a room.

There is no guarantee that Hilton will continue to let you get 0.37p per point when you redeem for a cash discount on a room – you won’t get it all of the time now.  You certainly shouldn’t dismiss any small pot of Hilton Honors you may have, and you shouldn’t turn up your nose at the chance to earn a small number.


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 2024)

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

Do you know that 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

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Did you know that the Virgin Atlantic credit cards are a great way of earning Hilton Honors points? Two Virgin Points can be converted into three Hilton Honors points. The Virgin Atlantic cards are the only Visa or Mastercard products in the UK which can indirectly earn Hilton Honors points. You can apply here.

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton 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

(Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from the major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.)

Comments (133)

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  • Chris123 says:

    Rob, before February, you can get a rooms for 5000, this article need more fact checking!!

    And before that you can do so in the UK as well, the Hampton by Hilton in wales namely.

    • Rob says:

      I know exactly how many points you used to need! But, realistically, very few people were ever going to book a 5k or 10k night property. Very few HFP readers find themselves in the middle of Wales looking for a good value redemption.

    • mark2 says:

      The Hampton in Newport is now 10,000 points

  • TripRep says:

    “Before February, when you needed at least 30,000 Hilton points to get a free room – and only then if there was reward availability – you certainly couldn’t treat them as anything like cash.”

    I’m wondering if Rob is referring to a specific hotel (but that doesn’t get a specific mention)

    Otherwise yes, to take this statement generally is nonsense. Cheapest rooms have always been 5000 pts, UK cheapest room is now 10000.

    • Rob says:

      I will reword it to ‘free room in any major tourist destination’, which is what I meant.

      • TripRep says:

        Ah, makes sense, assume you mean in the UK?

        I’m paying 5k a night in Bali….

      • Alan says:

        I’d also drop it to 20k as lots of airport properties (which are a pretty useful potential redemption) are that amount rather than 30k.

  • Mark says:

    I’m a bit annoyed, on Thursday I booked a room at Leeds Hilton for this Saturday and it cost me 26,000 points I only had till Friday at midnight to cancel. However Friday during the day when I looked again the room only required 22,000 points. I intended to cancel and rebook when I got home but forgot. I feel robbed I overpaid paid 4000 points I took a screenshot do you think I have a chance of getting these points back ? The room stayed at 22,000 points all of Saturday.

    • Olly says:

      I wouldn’t think so, if it went up after you had booked it would you expect them to take more points off you? Your memory let you down. It’s gets worse as you get older! 🙂

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Robbed is a bit harsh.

      You forgot to cancel and rebook, you win some you lose some and as above would you be OK with Hilton taking more if the price goes up?

    • James A says:

      I have a similar but worse story. I needed 2 nights in Southampton and the doubletree was expensive for what it is. I decided to splurge on the Ageas bowl however it was almost sold out, and I had to pony up 55,000 per night for a queen room with balcony. The day of arrival suddenly all rooms available and 28,000 would get you a room….

      I was a bit miffed but they did upgrade us to an exec suite with balcony and pitch before arrival. Have been sat out watching Hampshire vs Yorkshire in the sunshine

  • Alan says:

    I’ve always tended to value them in the 0.3-0.4p range – the main increase in value of them recently has been with the weakening of the pound. This had definitely provided more value to them than using cash abroad.

    Overall although they are indeed more usable than previously I never had that much of an issue spending them – I just tended to reserve them for times when I was getting more than 0.4p per point – my concern is that those opportunities will get smaller and smaller as Hilton either remove points caps behind the scenes or just let them drift up and up to maintain the 0.37p valuation. Definitely not as exciting a programme if they end up doing that.

    PS I think you meant basis rather than thesis given it was just an average value rather than a theoretical model 😉

  • Katy says:

    Value wise I had a great result this week. I was trying to book accommodation at Hilton Nashville for the CMA Festival and all were over £540 a night as everywhere was full. I managed to get two nights at 70000 Honors points each making a point worth £1.29!

    • Katy says:

      If my calculations are wrong please forgive me! I still think it was a great result!

      • Louie says:

        1.54p per point actually! Still very good though.

        • Louie says:

          No, 0.77p per night – I initially read your post as 70k total but on rereading I see it was per night.

    • Alan says:

      Fantastic redemption 🙂 If you were willing to pay that amount per night then I’d value them at that, however if there were other acceptable options that were cheaper (which may not have been the case given the situation!) then I would value them at that lower price – however regardless it will still be a superb valuation that you got 😀

  • Isodrac says:

    Issue is the concept of value is relative. Whilst there us sense in the maths, people like to use points for aspirational properties. You can always find sweet spots and ‘holes’ for booking but these aren’t exactly the Maldives are they!

  • Nick_C says:

    I’ve used the Doubletree on the outskirts of Sheffield. Useful for me as I have family in the area, but also a good base for the Peak District. Still 10,000 a night.

  • Paulm says:

    Slightly o/t – have recently done the Hilton status match and been given the usual 4 or 8 night challenge. One of my upcoming stays is a Barclaycard free night, will this count as one of the stays ?

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