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Most regional UK Marriott hotels to rebrand as Delta this autumn – what’s going on?

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Whilst there has been no formal announcement, Marriott International is switching most of its UK regional Marriott hotels to its Delta brand over the next three months.

Marriott International treats Delta Hotels as a ‘conversion’ brand, like Hilton’s DoubleTree or IHG’s voco. A ‘conversion’ brand has very few brand requirements, allowing hotels to defect from competitors with minimal investment.

It isn’t meant to be used for conversions within the same company ….

Most regional UK Marriott hotels to rebrand as Delta

Which Marriott hotels are converting to Delta?

Here is the list of Marriott-branded hotels outside London and their status. Marriott has confirmed the accuracy of this.

Regional UK Marriott hotels converting to Delta imminently:

City hotels:

  • Aberdeen
  • Bexleyheath
  • Birmingham
  • Bristol (City)
  • Durham
  • Edinburgh
  • Huntingdon
  • Liverpool
  • Manchester Airport
  • Newcastle MetroCentre
  • Northampton
  • Peterborough
  • Preston
  • Slough (Heathrow / Windsor)
  • Swansea
  • Swindon
  • Waltham Abbey
  • York
Most regional UK Marriott hotels to rebrand as Delta

Country club hotels:

  • Breadsall Priory
  • Forest of Arden
  • St Pierre
  • Tudor Park
  • Worsley Park

Regional UK Marriott hotels which are remaining:

City hotels:

  • Bournemouth
  • Bristol (Royal)
  • Cardiff
  • Glasgow
  • Leeds
  • Leicester
  • Manchester V&A
  • Portsmouth

Country club hotels:

  • Hanbury Manor
  • Lingfield Park

All of the London hotels are staying with the Marriott brand.

Where are there currently Delta Hotels?

There are already a handful of Delta Hotels in the UK, converted from other brands such as QHotels. These are:

  • Cheltenham Chase (ex QHotels)
  • Cheshunt (ex Marriott)
  • Milton Keynes (ex Hilton)
  • Nottingham Belfry (ex QHotels, below)
  • Telford (ex independent)
  • Warwick (ex Hilton, top image above)
Most regional UK Marriott hotels to rebrand as Delta

Why is this happening?

Good question.

Clearly, if you look at the hotels which are remaining, they are primarily ‘bigger city’ properties.

This doesn’t explain why Birmingham, Durham, Edinburgh and Liverpool have failed to make the cut, or why Bournemouth, Leicester and Portsmouth stay.

I get a feeling that it is a mix of:

  • The Marriott brand wanting to sharpen up its positioning in the UK, which explains the loss of the country clubs and some of the second tier properties
  • The Marriott brand downgrading some hotels which no longer meet its standards in terms of room quality, facilities etc
  • Marriott International potentially laying the groundwork for future UK expansion by clearing the way for new, better Marriott-branded hotels in some cities
  • Marriott International wanting to get some momentum behind the Delta brand, which is well behind target in terms of the number of UK openings – it is now seven years since the chain was acquired and conversion brands are meant to grow quickly

One thing that is interesting looking at the hotel list above is how few Marriott-branded hotels have opened in the UK in the last 20 years. Have any of the hotels listed above been built in this century? (EDIT: the comments say that Leicester opened in 2006.)

It isn’t clear why so many hotels have agreed to swap brands, given that the Delta Hotels name is less well known. It is possible that they were offered a sharp reduction in brand fees, and switching a large number of hotels at once will help establish the brand more quickly.

Is there a downside to staying at a Delta Hotel after the conversion?

Over time we can potentially expect the Delta properties to move away from Marriott standards in areas such as room service, room refurbishment etc.

In terms of Marriott Bonvoy benefits, little will change. You still earn points at the same rate, and it shouldn’t impact redemption pricing.

In terms of breakfast benefit, the rule is the same. Platinum and Titanium members of Marriott Bonvoy receive free breakfast if they choose it as their welcome amenity.

In terms of timing, the transitions will start in August, September or October depending on the hotel. I would assume that most hotels will remain open throughout given that the changes will be primarily cosmetic in the short term.


How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

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

The official Marriott Bonvoy American Express card comes with 20,000 points for signing up, 2 points for every £1 you spend and 15 elite night credits per year.

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You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points indirectly:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Marriott Bonvoy points is 2:3.

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

Comments (91)

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

  • Save East Coast Rewards says:

    Hilton did the same and converted a number of UK hotels to DoubleTree. Ones I recall include EDI and MAN airports and Rotherhithe (London docklands with the ferry to Canary Wharf). They did all have some sort of refurb before taking the new brand but presumably it was not a big enough refurbishment to warrant keeping the Hilton brand. The Hilton had the situation where a lot of UK hotels were old, dated and no longer met brand standards. It seems like Marriott has similar issues

    • RussellH says:

      New Year 2019/20 we stayed in a Dutch Hilton near Amersfoort that was transitioning to DT at the time. Building equipment tucked away, but obviously not actually being used at the time.
      All generally OK, but I had to complain about the bill – I was Gold and was charged for breakfast for one of the two nights, which was odd.

      • Save East Coast Rewards says:

        I stayed there in 2019 while it was still a Hilton, it was part of a 120km bike ride I set myself a challenge to do… off the ferry cycle there, the next day I just cycled as far as the nearest station and took the train the rest of the way. Two days of 100km+ rides would be too much for me

  • mark2 says:

    We stayed pre covid in the Tudor Park and it had definitely seen better days. The food was abysmal but they did comp it all when I complained. We then went to the Hampton in Canterbury which was so much better.

    Alternatively, the Delta Hotels Vancouver Downtown Suites is one of only two hotels where we have stayed twice on leisure.

    • Rob says:

      Delta in Canada is different because that is the original chain bought by Marriott. They bought it simply to get hold of the name because they liked it. Canadian ones are not all conversions.

    • Tariq says:

      I stayed in that Vancouver hotel too this year and had a really good stay, very good example of a Delta, but obviously for historic reasons as Rob alludes.

  • Andrew. says:

    All too often I find that hotels trading under the key brand, ie Hilton, Marriott or Holiday Inn are an utter disappointment. Generally I’d choose a Hampton, Springfield or HIx over the main brand every time.

  • dougzz99 says:

    Most hotel branding is a nonsense. Far too many brands, outside of a hotel brand geek, and far too acceptable for properties to not meet brand standards anyway.

  • tw33ty says:

    To be honest, the Aberdeen,Huntingdon and Newcastle hotels are terrible, I’m surprised they are even keeping them let alone rebranding

  • Jay-Marc says:

    “… how few Marriott-branded hotels have opened in the UK in the last 20 years. Have any of the hotels listed above been built in this century?”

    The Leicester Marriott was built in 2006.

  • the_real_a says:

    Stayed at the York Marriot a couple of weeks ago. Its very, very tired. About 3 bus loads of coach tourists each night. Was shocked it was a Marriot. Night and day when compared to the recent openings of regional Hiltons/garden inn/hamptons.

    • Andrew. says:

      How was the shower?

      I like the walk into town from there, but avoid staying there due to past experiences with poor (or no) water pressure in the top floor rooms in the morning.

      Breakfast was always good.

  • Bonnie says:

    Any idea what this means for Marriott Fam-tastic (agent) rates Rob? Will we lose it at those hotels?

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

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