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Review: Is Hilton Honors the best hotel loyalty scheme? (Part 2)

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In my previous article, I outlined ‘the facts’ of the Hilton Honors loyalty scheme. This article is my personal opinion, highlighting areas where I think you might want to focus.

The full series of articles can be found here:

The 10-second summary:

Strong points – best mid tier status of any scheme (free breakfast outside the US and a ‘preferred’ room of some sort with Gold), good UK coverage, strong pipeline of new openings, improved luxury portfolio, Amex Membership Rewards partner, Hilton Auctions experiences, free online transfers of points between members, long-running status match scheme, guaranteed lounge access for Diamond members, no resort fees on redemptions

Weak points – some UK Hilton-branded hotels dated, US ‘free breakfast’ now a small F&B credit, no Hilton credit card at present, regional differences in how status members are treated, redemption rates can go up without notice

Hilton Honors review

The longer version:

Let’s hit the good points first. Hilton Honors offers the best mid tier status of any of the hotel schemes. Once you have a Hilton Honors Gold card, you will receive free continental breakfast at non-US hotels and a ‘preferred room’ of some sort at most of the Hilton brands.

(Breakfast at US hotels has been replaced by a F&B credit. This is rarely enough to pay for breakfast, but is more flexible as it can be used at the bar or for other meals. Opinions on this change vary.)

You can status match your existing mid-tier hotel card and get upgraded for 90 days, with an extension if you hit a stay target.  Hilton Gold is also free if you hold an Amex Platinum charge card.

Put simply …. it is easy to earn mid-tier Gold status, and the benefits are surprisingly good once you have it.

I am impressed with the way that the portfolio has been refreshed in recent years. We have seen impressive new upscale Conrad and Waldorf Astoria hotels and decent Hampton budget properties. I would rank Hampton above Holiday Inn Express and indeed most Holiday Inn properties. 

There is also a deliberate attempt to bring in more upscale hotels, with the Curio brand attracting smart independents and the new LXR brand attracting owners who don’t want to be tied down by Conrad or Waldorf Astoria brand standards.

The core Hilton brand has seen a resurgence in the last few years with openings such as Tallinn and Paris Opera which we have reviewed, as well as London Bankside.  It’s fair to say, however, that the best options will be found with other brands.  Canopy – effectively a modern Hilton – has potential and is now in London and Paris.

Hilton Honors review

The Curio brand, which attracts leading independent hotels, has grown impressively.  This biggest issue is churn.  Of those we have reviewed, Gran Hotel Montesol, the boutique luxury Ibiza hotel has left, as has the Boston property and the ski hotel in Kitzbuhel.  The new Lost Property St Paul’s in London is an example of a new-build hotel joining Curio, which confirms the growing strength of the brand.

There are still some identity issues in the portfolio.  I defy anyone to explain the difference between a Conrad, a Waldorf Astoria and a LXR. Why is the smart Venice hotel branded as Hilton? Why is there no real distinction in the UK between Hilton and DoubleTree? Indeed, why are UK DoubleTree properties superior to Hilton when the opposite is meant to apply?  I am also confused about the difference between Hampton and Hilton Garden Inn, both of which are being rolled out aggressively at the moment – note that Garden Inn doesn’t offer free breakfast.

There are also variations in how status members are treated. Due to the huge number of people holding Gold status in the US via credit cards, you won’t get much from a property there. On the other hand, a Gold travelling in Asia can often do very well for upgrades and benefits. Even Diamond status is now being diluted as one of Hilton’s US credit cards gives it away as a benefit.

I am happy to move across a slug of Amex Membership Rewards points at 1:2 when a suitable redemption opportunity comes up.  Even buying points can prove to be excellent value – in December 2020 I bought almost 300,000 Hilton Honors to cut the cost of a stay at Waldorf Astoria Palm Jumeirah Dubai by a ludicrous 62%.

The Hilton Auctions ‘redeem points for experiences’ scheme continues to impress.  It isn’t yet on a par with Marriott Moments but it might still get there.  Hilton does a bad job of promoting this, which means that UK events often consist entirely of Head for Points readers if we choose to get behind a particular one! A new partnership with Chelsea football club will see more options appearing in 2024. I like to keep 100,000 points in my Hilton Honors account in case a good ‘buy it now’ event pops up.

If you’ve got Hilton Gold and you avoid staying at the most dated UK Hilton properties, you will probably have a decent stay. This is especially true at Conrad, Waldorf Astoria, Curio, Canopy and Hampton branded hotels where it’s hard to go very wrong.

Interestingly, top-tier Hilton Diamond status is generally seen as having only modest value. Unless you stay at hotels with a lounge, where you are guaranteed access, you get little extra at most places than a Gold.  A better strategy may be to secure your Hilton Gold requalification and then focus on achieving mid-tier status with another chain.

Is Hilton Honors worth joining?

What has changed in recent years?

Hilton Honors underwent a huge restructuring in 2017 which was generally positive.  This is when the chain started reducing the cost of points nights if pricing fell below certain thresholds.

It led to something unique amongst hotel loyalty schemes – if cash rates are low, the redemption rate dropped in tandem.  If rates went up, the reward price was capped. It was a win-win for members.

(Other chains have tried to copy this model but with a fatal flaw – no firm price cap. This removes the ability to get outsized value on peak nights.)

A follow-on batch of 2018 changes were more substantial.  Hilton decided to shift its focus to rewarding its most loyal members.  Blue (no status) and Silver members saw the number of points they earn cut, at the expense of Gold and Diamond members who saw their earnings increase. 

What I never understood is where this fits in with Hilton’s ‘book direct’ campaign.  For a Silver or base member, who gets no real status benefits and who saw his or her points cut and their ability to earn miles removed, why should they book direct if the ‘member discount’ is very small?  If the price is similar then Hotels.com Rewards – which effectively offers you 10% of your spend back in free nights as I explained here – looks more attractive, albeit this deal will be cut to 2% during 2024.

At the same time, Hilton clearly decided that it wasn’t doing enough to keep members loyal once they had their Gold or Diamond requalification in the bag.  There are now three reasons to keep going: extra bonuses for doing 40+ nights, elite rollover nights and the ability to give status to a friend.

There is still no word on the introduction of a new Hilton UK credit card.  The old card, dropped in March 2018, was my favourite ‘starter card’ for newcomers to miles and points and it was a shame to see it go.

Hilton Honors review

I’d also like to praise the free ‘points pooling’ feature.  This allows me to sweep across points earned by my (Gold) wife on her work trips into my (Diamond) account.  This makes it easier to earn the points needed for a redemption and ensures that we maximise status benefits when we do so.

Hilton also doesn’t get enough credit for not charging resort fees on redemption bookings. This makes no difference in Europe, where such fees are banned, but does save you money in the United States.

Conclusion

I have a soft spot for Hilton Honors, possible because I have been a member of it and its predecessor schemes for 30 years. What impresses me is:

  • decent new hotel openings, both in the luxury and mid-market sectors
  • the success of Curio in attracting high-end independent hotels which often have a spark missing from ‘mainstream’ Hilton properties, and
  • the ease with which you can obtain Hilton Gold (via a status match or from Amex Platinum)

The removal of reward charts and the tendency to increase the points pricing ‘cap’ at specific hotels with no notice means that you need to remain vigilent, however. I’d also expect Hilton to keep chipping away at the Gold ‘free breakfast’ benefit.

Diamond is under more pressure now that IHG One Rewards has relaunched its own scheme with meaningful benefits, including pre-bookable suite upgrade vouchers, free breakfast and free lounge access. When you look at the small print, Hilton Honors doesn’t guarantee much – no late check-out, no upgrade. Only breakfast and lounge access (if Diamond) are benefits you can rely on.

If forced to choose, I think that Marriott Bonvoy Platinum status still has the edge on Hilton Diamond. You have the guaranteed 4pm late check-out, lounge access, the five annual Suite Night Award vouchers, a more pro-active approach to upgrades and the lower nights target (50 v 60, with 15 of those 50 elite nights available for free via the Marriott Bonvoy American Express card).

Hilton’s saving grace remains the cap on individual hotel reward night prices. This creates genuine value in peak cities on peak nights that IHG and Marriott can no longer match.


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 (60)

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

  • Ian says:

    Really need a level above Diamond. Perhaps with Gold losing breakfast? (controversial I know)

    But the fact that US members can buy Diamond weakens it massively.

    Unfortunately it is hard for hotels to know whether you are a genuine loyal member or not.

    But I think an extra level with bigger benefits would be good.

    Signia by Hilton doesn’t give even Diamond access to the lounge.

    Talking about lounges this is now far weeker since the pandemic with several shut (and usually no free bar in the USA). We lost Hilton Ageas Bowl for example (although they also stripped other Diamond benefits).

    Which brings me on to the other sweeping issues with Hiltons in the UK – creeping charges.

    It is now common to see tips auto added at meals, parking charges and charges for the pool and resort charges even where it isn’t a resort (more USA)

    I realise that other chains have this, but it is becoming more obvious with many Hilton hotels.

    Finally one benefit you missed yesterday was that points redemption avoids the resort charge in the USA.

    • John says:

      Just avoid Hilton in the US and don’t worry about Americans – you still get treated well everywhere else (well Europe is average and Australian Hiltons collectively agreed to rip everyone off)

      • Qrfan says:

        I think that’s a bit strong. The Conrad’s in NY are great and I don’t really feel you need status to be treated well there. Different story in the mid range properties.

    • C says:

      I agree completely @ Ian.

      Hilton Birmingham Metropole (NEC) is a prime example. The Lounge is a zoo and they’ve started charging (£10pp IIRC) for the pool.

      I’m dropping from Diamond to Silver.

      However; I am Marriott Titanium and I will be Ambassador by Autumn.

      As commented in the article, I agree that Marriott Bonvoy is better although I get this can be influenced by an individual’s personal preference and “other” factors.

      • Julia says:

        ‘As commented in the article, I agree that Marriott Bonvoy is better although I get this can be influenced by an individual’s personal preference and “other” factors.’

        I’m not sure Marriott is better, the cut backs they keep making stop me from being loyal to them. I think it won’t be long now till they bring back the hated ‘starting with the second stay’ promotions they had to abandon due to covid.

        I didn’t know breakfast wasn’t included for non Hilton card holders at HGI. It feels like a brand that should be.

        • C says:

          What ‘cut backs’ specifically??

          Hilton Honors is now dire.
          As a Marriott Titanium the benefits far exceed Diamond, especially given half the universe is HH “Diamond”.

      • His Holyness says:

        Hilton Glasgow and DoubleTree Edinburgh Airport also have pool charges now.

    • Rob says:

      Good idea. Will add that in.

    • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

      You can buy Intercontinental Ambassador and yet there’s been no dilution of benefits there. 4pm check out always happens and a one catehory room upgrade always happens. I’m not sure I’d be quick to say Hilton’s problem is that there are too many buying their way to Diamond.

    • Tom says:

      Yes, Americans can “buy” Diamond status but it costs $550 a year from 2024, so that is not nothing. And it does not mean those members are not loyal to Hilton since Diamond is worthless unless you spend a fair number of nights at Hiltons each year, and usually at the more expensive ones.

      • Rob says:

        You pay $550 and you get (as well as Diamond) an Annual Free Night certificate with no excluded properties, $400 annually to spend at Hilton resort properties and $200 annually to spend on air fare. They are basically paying you to get it, and that’s before you factor in the value of Diamond.

        • Tom says:

          Fair points, the annual free night is actually good value. The last 2 years I used it for the Astoria Aldwych property and the Park Lane Hilton, both on a Saturday night.

          I do not use the resort and airline credits however.

  • Andy says:

    You missed out the inflation in the standard reward rates.
    Not long ago 50,000 points would get you a standard room at excellent hotels. Now you’re talking 90,000 points for the same room.

    • Lady London says:

      Hilton rooms I used to book in the midrange have increased points cost by 2.5 to 3 times more, just the past 2 years or so. Cash price hasn’t moved much in the same time.

      And am I the only one finding Hilton promotions lacklustre and not even worth signing up for “just in case” ?

      IHG and Hilton seem to have decided to reward only corporate travellers doing weeks away or highish number of nights. So it’s about them trying to be the chosen chain for someone that’s got to travel anyway.

      There used to be opportunities with these chains for those of us travelling less at midrange, who are prepared to add discretionary trips and nights for an incentive that, adding a few extra trips and / or nights, will add up to a useable benefit. But these chains seem to have squeezed out incentive for discretionary extra bookings.

      At the higher end, anyone reading HfP will be booking via Emyr a set of decent benefits is akways on offer regardless od membershio status.

      • Sam says:

        The Hilton promos offer are nothing when you compare the ludicrous 200,000 bonus points offered with these Hilton Aspire cards.
        I wholeheartedly agree with the coments above that there needs to be level above diamond which recognises people the have their status earned exclusively through paid stays at Hilton properties (30 stays/60 night annually) to someone who gets it simply for signing up to a credit card. That $550 card fee is offset by the other benefits offered by the card.

  • NicktheGreek says:

    Marriott may be a better program but for the life of me I can’t ever get them to be competitive in price to Hilton for where and when I want to stay, or at least in about 80% of cases. Being Diamond with Hilton and Gold with Marriott, the free breakfast etc swings it in Hilton favour still.

  • mark2 says:

    The smart Venice hotel pictured at the top (Stucky Molino) is superb.
    The website says that I will retain Gold for 2024, which is surprising as I received it with Amex Platinum many years ago and cannot recall ever paying for a Hilton stay

    • Chris says:

      The Stucky Molino may be good, but it has the worst lounge of any Hilton I have ever stayed at. It is more a corridor next to the windows which they have managed to put a few tables next to. If staying there, do not expect too much from the happy hour and food either.

  • Mark Robey says:

    Hilton Garden Inn Birmingham (UK) does offer a free breakfast.

    • Ryan says:

      As does Glasgow. You can change this on the App to complimentary breakfast or 750 points.

      • Rob says:

        It’s free for Gold IF you select it as a My Way benefit before check in. If you don’t, you pay, as I found once.

      • Graeme says:

        I stayed at HGI Glasgow a few days ago. As a Diamond, I always have the MyWay preference set to 750 points, but I received the points and was also on their free breakfast list. I also received a free drink voucher and a 25% off restaurant voucher. Altogether, not bad for the £61 rate!

        • John says:

          Every HGI is different but there is a way to always get both breakfast and points.

        • Ryan says:

          Correct Graeme, that’s how it’s always worked for me at HGI Glasgow. Remember and book the room for two next time even if travelling alone. 😉

  • Mike says:

    You mentioned IHG scheme in the same paragraph as Hilton’s lack of guaranteed late check-out:

    “Diamond is under more pressure now that IHG One Rewards has relaunched its own scheme with meaningful benefits, including pre-bookable suite upgrade vouchers, free breakfast and free lounge access. When you look at the small print, Hilton Honors doesn’t guarantee much – no late check-out…”

    IHG doesn’t guarantee late check-out either, my favourite being a IHG property I’ve been to many times were an an enquiry about a late check-out is met with come down on the morning of check-out and we’ll see if we can do it (this is their response every time, but one). I want to stay in bed not go to reception…

    That said out of the loyalty schemes I am a member of, IHG is better than Accor, Radisson and Hilton, though worse than Marriott.

    • Rob says:

      Only Marriott and Hyatt guarantee it.

      • Mike says:

        Yes, which is certainly a tick in Marriott’s favour.

        Are you going to do an article of the MGM/Marriott benefits? The curtailment of the benefits at the end of the year seems to be pretty weak.

        • Rob says:

          When it officially launches, yes.

          • Mike says:

            I guess you’re expecting more information than Tuesday’s email with the benefits sent by Marriott. I was a bit disappointed by the benefits listed, I was hoping for a bit more.

  • Andy says:

    Under Hilton Diamond benefits (source https://www.hilton.com/en/hilton-honors/guest/my-account/) the upgrade benefit is described as:

    “Space-available room upgrades
    If we have a better room available, it’s yours – up to a 1-bedroom suite.”

    But the T&Cs fit much more closely to Rob’s experience – a corner room might be an upgrade. Or the availability might not be there even though it ought to be.

    Should HfP approach Hilton and tell them to change the wording to “You might get a better room if the hotel feels like it” – because that’s how the benefit feels to me!

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    “note that Garden Inn doesn’t offer free breakfast.”

    This sentence is wrong. Check your Hilton MyWay benefits and you’ll see it is one of the selectable options. (In USA this gives $ credit in line with other brands).

    Yes, no resort fees on US points stays is a MASSIVE benefit.

    • Revs says:

      The point is that everybody (irrespective of status or even membership) gets “free” breakfast at Hampton but you have to choose it as a status benefit at HGI

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

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