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Review: Is Hilton Honors the best hotel loyalty scheme? (Part 1)

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This is the second part of our overview series looking at the main hotel loyalty schemes.  Each scheme will be covered over two articles on consecutive days. One will list the basic facts of the scheme  – basically ‘How does Hilton Honors work?‘ – the other, published tomorrow, will be my subjective view of what is of particular merit.

The full series of articles can be found here:

Hilton Honors covers 7,000+ hotels globally under 22 main brands – Waldorf Astoria, LXR, Conrad, Hilton, Hilton Grand Vacation, Embassy Suites, DoubleTree, Hilton Garden Inn, Homewood Suites, Hampton Inn, Canopy, Curio, Tru, Tapestry Collection and Home2Suites.  New brands include Signia (convention focused), Tempo, Spark (economy), LivSmart (budget extended stay) and Motto (group focused).

The Hilton Honors website is here.

Hilton Honors review

What is the geographic spread?

The European properties are mainly branded Hampton and Hilton with a growing number of DoubleTree, Curio and Waldorf Astoria sites. I think that Hampton is now the biggest brand globally.

In general, many UK Hilton branded hotels in the regions are tired and in need of refurbishment although newer openings (London Bankside, St George’s Park, Manchester, Bournemouth) are impressive.

DoubleTree is well regarded despite technically being one rung below the main Hilton brand. After a few years of stagnation, there have been a number of high-profile hotel openings – Hampton (a budget brand with free breakfast) is seen as having most potential and they are now popping up across the UK.  There is also a more modest roll-out of Hilton Garden Inn which targets the same three star market, including an intriguing one in Snowdonia and one built into the racetrack at Silverstone.

Curio Collection has a strong niche in encouraging luxury independent hotels to join the Hilton ‘system’. The most recent high profile UK Hilton opening, Lost Property St Paul’s in London, is part of Curio (review here). LXR, aimed at larger independent luxury hotels, signed up The Biltmore in Mayfair as its first UK member.

How does Hilton Honors work?

Do I use them?

I do.  I currently have Hilton Honors Diamond status although it will lapse in March 2024. I originally got this via a Hilton status match, which I outline here and locked it in for 2021, 2022 and 2023 due to Hilton’s generous covid status retention policies.

Recent 2023/24 HfP review stays include Hilton Berlin (review), The Trafalgar St James in London (review), Hotel Resonance Taipei (review), Hampton Bournemouth (review), Hilton Diagonal Mar Barcelona (review), Hilton Frankfurt City Centre (review), Canopy San Francisco SoMa (review), The Gantry Stratford (review), Hilton Belfast (review), Hampton London City (review), Conrad Riviera Maya Tulum (review), Hart Shoreditch (review), Lost Property St Paul’s (review), Hilton Rotterdam (review) and Motto Rotterdam Blaak (review). We certainly got around last year ….

Of personal paid stays, I spent five nights at Waldorf Astoria Palm Jumeirah in Dubai over Christmas in 2020 using purchased Hilton Honors points. My stays in 2022/23 were more prosaic – Hampton Stansted Airport (review), a couple of stays at Hampton York and a return to Hilton Bournemouth (review) – but totally satisfactory.

Looking at UK airport hotels, HfP has looked at the Hampton at Gatwick Airport which is directly at the North Terminal as well as the Hilton at Gatwick South Terminal, Hilton Heathrow Terminal 4, the Hampton at Stansted Airport, the new Hilton Garden Inn at Heathrow T2 and the Hilton Garden Inn at Hatton Cross / Heathrow.  Click the link for our review of each of these hotels.

Hilton Honors review

If you’re looking for personal recommendations, I like Conrad New York Downtown where I have stayed three times on a redemption – it has HUGE rooms by NYC standards as it is ‘all suite’. It now has an ‘all suite’ sibling in Conrad New York Midtown, photo immediately above – although be warned that it has a handful of standard sized rooms that are often used for redemptions.

For families, we visited Hilton (was a Waldorf Astoria) Syon Park outside London a few times when our children were younger which is good for a ‘not very far from home’ break. We also went to the impressive Hilton St Georges Park at the National Football Centre in Burton-upon-Trent.

I have been particularly impressed by some of the hotels in the Curio and Tapestry collections.  Hilton is managing to entice some genuinely good independent hotels to join these ‘soft branded’ chains. I am also fond of Hampton, which I see as a cut above Holiday Inn Express. Whilst I’ve never paid to stay at a Canopy, I’ve toured a few and am impressed by the combination of style and cost.

What are the elite levels in Hilton Honors?

Here is a summary of Hilton Honors elite levels and benefits:

  • Silver – requires 4 stays or 10 nights. Benefits are 20% bonus on base points, free bottled water at most brands.
  • Gold – requires 20 stays or 40 nights or 75,000 base points. Benefits are 80% bonus on base points, ‘preferred’ room of some sort (often just a higher floor or better view, not necessarily next category up), free breakfast (F&B cash credit in the US), additional bonuses from 40+ nights per year.
  • Diamond – requires 30 stays or 60 nights or 120,000 base points. Benefits are 100% bonus on base points, non-guaranteed upgrade, free breakfast (F&B cash credit in the US), free high-speed internet, guaranteed lounge access.  Additional milestone bonuses kick in from 40+ nights per year to encourage you to keep staying after you earn or retain Diamond.
Hilton Honors review

Hilton has been running regular status match promotions over the last couple of years. The current version of Hilton’s status match is here.  You get Gold status for 90 days and will retain it if you complete eight (for Gold) or 14 (for Diamond) nights in that time. If you are interested I suggest waiting until March / April when it should update and offer status to March 2026 instead of the current March 2025.

All elite members receive ‘fifth night free’ when booking reward nights, effectively a 20% discount on a 5-night stay.

Reward stays DO count towards earning status.

Suite upgrades are NOT an elite benefit. I am not saying that a Diamond will never get one, but the hotel has no obligation to do so.

British Airways offers free Diamond status to Gold Guest List members of British Airways Executive Club which requires you to earn 5,000 tier points in one year (3,000 tier points to renew).

The Platinum Card from American Express offers free Gold status for as long as you retain the card. The Centurion Card, which is invitation only, offers free Diamond status.

The full table of elite benefits is here.  As with all other major brands, you will not receive anything, neither points nor benefits, if you book via a third party website such as Expedia.

You can transfer your points to friends and family without charge. I have found this surprisingly useful, especially as transfers can be done online.  It lets me sweep the handful of points my wife earns each year into my account so they are not wasted.

Long-term Diamond members can request a one-off rollover of their status without the need to formally requalify which is handy if changing jobs, taking maternity leave etc.

Elite nights (but not elite stays) roll over if you achieve more than is required to renew your current tier level but not enough to be promoted.  You can also gift status to a friend if you stay more than 60 nights per year.

How do you earn Hilton Honors points?

For each stay, you will earn 10 base points per $1 plus a bonus of:

  • 20% for Silver
  • 80% for Gold
  • 100% for Diamond

Some limited service brands, not present in the UK, have a lower earning rate of 5 points per $1.

Hilton Honors is always running a major promotion so your average number of points earned per stay will always be higher than the numbers quoted above. See our ‘Top Hotel Bonus Points Offers‘ page for any current offers.

Other Hilton earning partnerships of note include:

Is Hilton Honors the best hotel loyalty scheme?

What are Hilton Honors points worth?

We have an article dedicated to working out what Hilton Honors points are worth which you can find here.

Our mid-case valuation is 0.33p per point but you can do a lot better.

How do you spend Hilton Honors points?

There are now NO published redemption categories. Previously, redemption rates for hotels ran from 5,000 points in Category 1 to 95,000 points in Category 10.

Under the new structure, the number of points required is based on the cash cost of that particular night.  The ‘pence per point’ value varies by hotel but is usually around 0.33p.

Importantly, you can pay with ANY combination of cash and points. If you have 80% of the points for a free night, you can use those and pay 20% of the cash price on top – or vice versa.

However – and this is important – the number of points charged per night at each hotel is capped. This means, for example, that you will never pay more than 120,000 points – and usually 95,000 points – for a standard room at the top Conrad or Waldorf Astoria hotels irrespective of the cash rate. The Waldorf Astoria Maldives has a cap of 150,000 points on some days.

The cap is important because it means that you still receive ‘outsize’ value on redemptions in major cities on peak dates.

One problem with no longer having published reward charts showing the hotel points price caps is that Hilton can, and does, increase the capped cost of a hotel with no notice.

Elite members receive the 5th night free on standard room redemptions.

You don’t pay ‘resort fees’. An underappreciated benefit of Hilton Honors points redemptions is that any resort fees, often charged by US and Caribbean hotels, are not applied. This can lead to substantial nightly savings.

Hilton has also ‘Premium Room’ redemptions. In general, you should ignore these. They usually involve Hilton effectively buying your room for you from the hotel, at a fixed exchange rate of around 0.25p per Hilton point. This is poor.

Hilton Auctions allows you to redeem your points for concert and event tickets.  There have been some impressive UK events offered via this platform, including recent ‘Secret Socials’ concerts at London hotels and Formula 1 events with McLaren. Hilton has a new partnership with Chelsea football club which will open up redemption opportunities.

How does Hilton Honors work?

Do Hilton Honors points expire?

Points expire after 24 months of no activity on the account – see the scheme rules here. This is generous by industry standards. Pre-covid it was only 12 months but it has now been permanently increased.

You could reset the counter by transferring some Amex Membership Rewards points across or buying 1,000 points. Use a tool like Award Wallet to keep track of expiry dates.

I wrote a full article on how to stop your Hilton Honors points expiring.

Can you upgrade using Hilton Honors points?

You can book any room category you want with Hilton Honors and use whatever combination of cash and points you prefer.

However, these ‘Premium Room Rewards’ – which involves Hilton paying the hotel the full cash rate for your room and recharging you in points – give you a lower ‘pence per point’ return compared to ‘Standard Room Rewards’ which come from reward inventory.  Standard rewards are only available for entry-level room categories.

Are ‘cash and points’ redemptions available?

You can book any room category you want and use whatever combination of cash and points you prefer. This is will offer you a poorer ‘pence per point’ return than a standard redemption, however.

Can you convert Hilton Honors points into airline miles?

Hilton Honors points can be transferred to a large number of airlines including British Airways and Virgin Atlantic. The ratio is a pathetic 10:1, however (6.7:1 for Virgin Atlantic).

If you assume that 1 Hilton Honors point is worth 0.33p on average, then you would be sacrificing 3.3p of free hotel stays to gain 1 Avios. This is a poor deal given we that value an Avios at around 1p.

Can you earn Avios directly without collecting points?

No.

How does Hilton Honors work?

What are the Hilton Honors UK credit card partnerships?

Can you get elite status with a UK credit card?  Yes. American Express Platinum offers you free Hilton Gold for as long as you hold Platinum, whilst the invite-only Amex Centurion card gives Hilton Diamond status.  The official Hilton Honors Visa card was withdrawn in March 2018.

Is Hilton Honors an Amex Membership Rewards partner? Yes, at a 1:2 transfer rate.

Hilton Honors is also a Virgin Atlantic Flying Club partner – you can move Virgin Points to Hilton at the rate of 2 to 3, with a 10,000 miles minimum. As Virgin is a Tesco Clubcard partner, you can therefore convert Tesco Clubcard point to Hilton Honors by routing through Virgin Flying Club, although this is not hugely attractive.

Purchasing and transferring Hilton Honors points

You can buy Hilton Honors points for $10 per 1,000 via this link.  Regular sales offer bonuses of up to 100%.

It is easy to use up small quantities of points you may acquire as you can use as few as 5,000 points to get a cash discount on your next booking.

The ‘Points Pooling’ feature allows you to pass points from one person to another for free.  They do not need to share your address or surname. This is a very handy feature which allows you to hoover up points from friends and family members in your account, or to move points to the account of the person with highest status if booking a reward.

What is my personal opinion of Hilton Honors?

Part 2 of this article – click here – explains how Hilton Honors works and gives my personal opinion on the pros and cons of the programme.


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 and they come with generous sign-up bonuses. 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 (58)

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

  • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

    Controversial view perhaps but…I would pay for a Hilton equivalent of Intercontinental Ambassador if it guaranteed me 4pm check out.

    At present, getting anything beyond 1pm as a Diamond is nigh-on impossible. Therefore all my weekend city breaks go to Marriott or Intercontinentals, where I know I can check out at 4 and head to the airport shortly thereafter for a flight around 7pm on a Sunday.

    Until Hilton find a way of guaranteeing me this (even Impresario rates promise 4pm but won’t guarantee it; Amex FHR does though) then their utility to me is limited.

    • Mike says:

      Absolutely this, it’s so nice just getting the late checkout at a Marriott without the “negotiation” that happens at a Hilton. You ask for 2pm they offer 1pm, it’s so tedious. I’ve checked into Marriotts, and staff member has put a 4pm late checkout on the room, without me having to ask.

    • Tom says:

      Yep, this is exactly why I ditched Hilton for SPG as my main chain (and then Marriott for Hyatt more recently given the same benefit). There is no way back to Hilton for me without guaranteed late check out, that’s worth far more than a free breakfast or some points to me.

    • John says:

      Yes the late check out thing is mighty annoying – as is the rarity of upgrades if you book anything but the lowest room type, and the new “breakfast benefit” that doesn’t cover breakfast.
      But… what keeps me staying at Hilton rather than Marriott is the redemptions. I know that I can, worst case, use points + cash to get a (higher than base level) room in a hotel I want when I want it.
      With Marriott when I search for redemptions – it always seems like there’s either no room available, or it’s the absolute lowest level of room with twin beds. I often wonder if I’m doing something wrong…

      • aseftel says:

        I’m yet to find a hotel that won’t allow you to upgrade a points booking to a higher category with a cash supplement.

        • Chris says:

          I am finding that booking a room with points a great benefit. But I don’t seem to get the email asking if I want to get a standby upgrade for £xx. Is this just me?

          • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

            Check you have opted into direct marketing from Hilton. I wasn’t till December so only received bare minimum booking confirmation emails.

    • Aston100 says:

      Assuming it isn’t a work related stay in the UK: If I had an evening flight, I wouldn’t be sitting in the hotel until 4pm. I’d use the time to see and do some more stuff.
      Obviously everyone has different priorities, but there is no way a 4pm checkout would be worth more than breakfast, especially on a multiple night stay. This is assuming a leisure stay.

      • Richie says:

        Guests may prefer to go out in the morning and then want to return to their room at 3:30pm and do something prior to checking out at 4pm.

      • Rob says:

        Tell you how it works for me. Go out AM. Return to hotel around 3pm. Do an hour of work. Pack. Leave at 4. Go to airport.

        If you are in a resort the 4pm is even more important.

        • Ryan says:

          Talk of a weekend city break. Would leaving your presumably small amount of luggage with the concierge, not be too troublesome?

          • Richie says:

            Some guests may want to feed a baby at 3.30pm, change a baby’s nappy, sort their stoma bag, change their wig etc. All guests aren’t the same, some really prefer 4pm check-out for their own good reasons.

          • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

            It’s about having a safe for valuables, somewhere to shower after walking round in 30+ degree heat since morning, etc.

          • Ryan says:

            A safe for valuables on a weekend break and change your wig.

            Ok, let’s take things to the extreme….

            I’ll stick with the breakfast.

          • Rob says:

            If it’s a Sunday then I’m in a resort hotel with the family. Who wants to pack up at 11am when they are not leaving the premises until 4pm?!

            People who don’t like 4pm check-out have generally never done it, in the same way that people don’t value the flexibility of Avios tickets until they’ve lost money buying an inflexible flight ticket, or think BA Club Europe is bad value until they’ve actually flown it.

      • Tom says:

        Yes, the late check-out is rarely useful to me. The ability to check in early is more useful if, say, I have flown into London from the US and arrive at LHR at 8 am. I can kill some time in the BA arrivals lounge but being able to check in at 11 or noon is great.

        Hotels want to turn rooms over around lunchtime, I understand why that is.

      • CJD says:

        Depends on your travel arrangements. On our summer holiday we had either an 11 or 12am checkout – our flight home wasn’t until after 10pm and hotel pickup wasn’t until about 7 – thankfully the hotel was equipped and allowed us use of a room for half an hour at 6pm to get showered and changed but a late checkout would have been ideal.

  • Julia says:

    We like Hamptons and Hilton Garden Inns. HGIs are really useful for getting laundry done on the road. The ability to use points with cash is also helpful. Many times I’ve changed our stay from the cheaper Courtyard Gatwick to the Hilton Gatwick with its crispy bacon and tinned tomatoes after they’ve allowed me to throw a few points to bring down the price.

    We’re also very lucky to have been able to keep the old Hilton Barclaycard which gives us free breakfast and extra points on Hilton stays. It’s now also our only loyalty scheme credit card which we legitimately claim to be eligible.

  • Richard says:

    For me outside of London, IHG beats Hilton in the UK. I’m struggling for a city where Hilton has a much better offering than IHG. Makes a struggle to stick with Hilton

    • aseftel says:

      I completely agree with what you’re saying, but off the top of my head Hilton is stronger in Cambridge (Fellows) and St Albans (Samuel Ryder).

  • Man of Kent says:

    Good Morning – Isn’t the upgrade for Golds on a “space available” basis rather than “guaranteed”?

    • Tilly says:

      That’s what I thought too

      • Rob says:

        ‘Upgrade’ includes ‘best room in the category you booked’, ‘higher floor’, ‘further from elevator’. It does NOT mean, necessarily, a different room category.

        • Ryan says:

          So why are you offered rooms next to the elevator on lower floors at online check in stage?

          There is no ‘Guarantee’ of any type of upgrade at Hilton for Diamond members, and to suggest there is, is disingenuous.

          As a Diamond member(and possibly gold I don’t know) , you can set room preferences to be either close or further away from elevators so these room types are certainly not ‘upgrades’.

          • Rob says:

            Part 2 tomorrow uses the term ‘preferred’ room which is what Hilton calls the Gold benefit.

            I agree that the wording here was a bit strong, but both our recent Hilton review stays (Trafalgar, Berlin) which were cash stays were upgraded. Rhys as Diamond got a suite at Trafalgar, Conny got a one level in Berlin as Gold. I got a suite as Diamond at Hilton Bournemouth in October. We just call it as we see it.

  • Tilly says:

    We like Doubletrees generally but happy to stay in any of their brands, although some of their main Hilton branded hotels are looking rather tired. The Hilton in Leicester gave us a filthy cot for our baby, decided to pop her in one of the beds instead. In general though we stay at more Hilton group hotels than others. The Hilton Barclaycard helps maintain gold with complimentary breakfast. Room redemptions are now more expensive for us though with 2 preschool age children so needing larger rooms.

    • Sam says:

      The Hilton Leicester is by far the absolute worst Hilton property I’ve stayed at in all the years staying at Hilton’s. The Northampton one is a close second.
      Shoddy dated rooms and very stingy on the diamond perks. Barely recognised.
      Awful experience.

  • S879 says:

    Losing Diamond after about 7 years. Did 21 nights and it says dropping to Silver. Read that people who did 3 – 6 stays somehow retaining Diamond so not sure how they decide. No rollover nights.

    • S879 says:

      *3 – 6 nights I meant. We have found Hilton Diamond to be great so gutted about losing it. Partner is Gold through Hilton Barclaycard so we will switch.

    • Chris says:

      Yeah I seem to be one of those. I moved all my stays to Marriott a few years ago but retained diamond after one night two years ago (which was a published offer), and I think I did one night last year and it seems to have rolled over again. No idea why but I’ll take it 🤷

      • Tariq says:

        I had perpetual Gold for years in the 2020s from holding the Amex Platinum for just one year… seems to be a Hilton thing.

  • Roger C says:

    I’ve still got a Hilton Barclaycad, but I hen’t used it much in a while. Can someone remind me of the benefits – some of the comments above hae surpised me.

    • Rob says:

      Gold for spending £10k per year (?), 2 points per £1, blocks you from 25,000 Avios bonus on Barc Avios Plus …..

      • RussellH says:

        … and 3 points per £1 on Hilton stays.
        Never been a problem before, but I had to ask for the extra points following a stay at Bristol HGI last September.

        And yes: Gold for spending £10k per year

        • Adam says:

          I used the card for Hampton in Stansted and Torquay – never got extra points. I assumed they ditched extra earnings long time ago.

          • John says:

            No they just haven’t updated their list of Hiltons so none of the recent builds and recent joiners work. If you stay at a property which used to be a Hilton but isn’t any longer, you may still get the 3x points

    • ankomonkey says:

      I think you get Honors Silver just for having the card. This becomes Gold if you spend £10k in a calendar year (I think, rather than your card anniversary year).

  • Sunil says:

    Rob, just a correction – Conrad midtown NYC is no longer all Suite. During Covid they created a number of normal deluxe room which are now the standard for points redemptions, although sometimes cab still get junior suites for the same number of points.

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