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The new Hilton Honors payment cards are here! What are the benefits?

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Hilton Honors has launched two new Mastercard payment cards.

And, very interestingly, they are DEBIT cards and not credit cards.

You can see full details of the new Hilton Honors debit cards, and apply, by clicking here.

Even if you have the (closed to new applicants) Hilton Honors Barclaycard or another debit card issued by Currensea, who is behind this card, you can still apply for these new Hilton Honors debit cards and receive the sign-up bonus.

Hilton Honors debit cards

This is a two-part article.  This part is basically ‘the facts’.  The second part, also published today, is a Q&A piece.

Here are the key features of the new Hilton debit cards

  • You can choose between the Hilton Honors Debit Card (£60 annual fee) and the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card (£150 annual fee)
  • The cards are linked to your existing current account – virtually all UK banks participate – and transactions are charged to it in the same way as if you used your normal bank debit card
  • Both cards come with a sign-up bonus, which is triggered by FX spend
  • Both cards come with instant Hilton Honors status – Silver Elite for the £60 card and Gold Elite for the £150 card
  • Status is NOT a one year offer – you will retain your Hilton Honors status for as long as you retain your debit card
  • These cards are aimed at foreign spending and have far better FX rates than all travel rewards credit cards – 0.5% FX fee on the £60 card and 0% FX fee on the £150 card
  • You earn points on both domestic and foreign currency spend, with a far higher rate for FX spending and Hilton spending
  • Because the cards are debit cards, you will be accepted irrespective of the number of credit cards you hold or your income or employment status – these cards are for everyone. You will need to hold a UK current account with a participating bank and pass a ‘soft’ credit check for ID purposes.

Let’s look at the two cards in detail.

Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card

The premium card – Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card

Unlike most of our card content, I don’t need to quote an APR interest rate because there isn’t one. This is a debit card, with the money taken straight from your existing bank current account.

As you can see from the picture above, it’s a minimalist design – although in reality it is vertical rather than horizontal as we show. All of your personal information is on the back.

This is what you get (full details are on the application website here):

  • £150 annual fee
  • Gold status in Hilton Honors for as long as you hold the card
  • 0% FX fees when spending in foreign currency
  • 1.5 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in the UK
  • 3 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in Hilton properties in the UK
  • 3 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in foreign currency
  • 4.5 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in Hilton properties outside the UK

There is a sign-up bonus of 12,000 Hilton Honors points if you apply by 30th November 2024. You need to spend £2,500 in foreign currency in your first six months to receive the bonus.

You can apply for the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here.

Hilton Honors Debit Card

The basic card – Hilton Honors Debit Card

Again, unlike most of our card content, I don’t need to quote an APR interest rate because there isn’t one. This is a debit card, with the money taken straight from your existing bank current account.

This is what you get (full details are on the application website here):

  • £60 annual fee
  • Silver status in Hilton Honors for as long as you hold the card
  • 0.5% FX fees when spending in foreign currency
  • 1 Hilton Honors point per £1 spent in the UK
  • 2 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in Hilton properties in the UK
  • 2 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in foreign currency
  • 3 Hilton Honors points per £1 spent in Hilton properties outside the UK

There is a sign-up bonus of 3,500 Hilton Honors points if you apply by 30th November 2024. You need to spend £1,000 in foreign currency in your first six months to receive the bonus.

You can apply for the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

Hilton Honors elite status cards

What benefits do I get with the elite status I receive?

Hilton Honors covers 8,000+ hotels globally under 24 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).

There are three levels of elite status in the Hilton Honors programme. Of the two status levels which you can receive from taking out a Hilton Honors debit card:

Gold

  • Status is kept for as long as you hold the debit card
  • Gold usually requires 20 stays or 40 nights or $7,500 of pre-tax spending in a calendar year
  • Key bonus are an 80% bonus on base points on every stay, ‘preferred’ room of some sort (often just a higher floor or better view, not necessarily next category up), free breakfast for two people (or a cash credit towards any food or drink spend in the US)

Silver

  • Status is kept for as long as you hold the debit card
  • Silver usually requires 4 stays or 10 nights in a calendar year
  • Key bonus are a 20% bonus on base points on every stay, free bottled water at most Hilton brands and eligibility for ‘5 nights for the points of 4’ when redeeming

For clarity, you are given the status directly and do NOT receive the equivalent number of elite nights.

This means that if you receive Silver status you will still need to do the full 20 stays or 40 nights or $7,500 of pre-tax spending to become Gold.

Similarly, if you receive Gold status you will still need to do the full 30 stays or 60 nights or $12,000 of pre-tax spending to become Diamond.

In Part 2 ….

What I have written above are the ‘hard facts’ about the new Hilton Honors debit cards.  In Part 2 – click here – we’ll look at the pros and cons and try to anticipate some of your questions.

You can learn more about both cards, and apply, via this special Hilton Honors / Currensea website here.

Comments (153)

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

  • Sam says:

    When it say these cards are linked to your current account, does that mean all existing direct debits will be moved over to this card?
    Because outside of this our monthly spend is purely on credit cards.
    I’m 4 years Diamond, so the status part of it is worthless to me.

    • NorthernLass says:

      Direct debits come from your bank account, not your debit card.

    • Roy says:

      No, it’s as if each card payment is immediately direct debited from your current account.

      Except that it’s done with Open Banking, which is like direct debit only different

  • Swiss Jim says:

    Ultimately I guess it’s how good their systems are at picking up non points earning transactions. They’re a pain, but with some thought there will be opportunities here.

  • NorthernLass says:

    Just mulling this over, I suppose if you want to be gold and would get more than £150 of breakfast and upgrades, but don’t stay enough nights, this could be a cheaper alternative to the Amex Platinum. I know it’s comparing apples and oranges but I think the HH status is far and away the best one you can get from the Plat.

    • ed_fly says:

      For me melia gold was way more valuable. The 20% codes saved me a lot more than a few Hilton brekkies. Though going to depend on what stays people have lined up.

    • BJ says:

      Everybody needs to remember that the main carrot free breakfast – has already been watered-down. My expectation is that it will continue to be so and ultimately removed for Gold. I’ve been told by one Hiltom GM there is a lit of support for this in very busy hotels that gave difficulty coping with tge breakfast rush because they have insufficient space and facilities required to match the volume if Gold and Diamond guests.

      • JDB says:

        Also, free breakfast is available for the higher Hilton brands via a variety of channels including Virtuoso agents and if booking directly it’s very readily offered.

      • BOSSMANTRAVELS says:

        As a gold the free breakfast in Europe is a reason to book Hilton. If they water this down I’m sure I’m not the only one who would start looking at other chains.

      • Martin S says:

        The free breakfast is the only reason I book Hiltons, as otherwise I see them as overpriced. If they remove it then that will be the end of staying in for me.

    • Man of Kent says:

      I don’t think you can include upgrades when looking at Gold benefits as nothing is guaranteed and it only mentions ‘preferred’ rooms. The breakfast and the 5 – 4 – 4 would seem to be the most attractive benefits.

  • Navid says:

    It‘s interesting to see how the offer differs across the countries. In Germany, Hilton is offering a new credit card (Mastercard) that gives the Gold status in HH, and only costs €72 per year. It offers comprehensive travel insurance and requires only one spend to maintain the status. And if one manages to spend over €40 K per annum, they will upgrade you to Diamond!
    https://www.hiltonhonorscreditcard.de/

    • Paul says:

      Rip off Britain again!

      I do hope IHG comes up with something better than this.

      Simply not paying £160 for a debit card to see cash withdrawn from my account.

      I run my current account very close to the wire on a daily basis and pay off credit cards once a month on last possible day. All cash is earning interest at 4.5% or higher till it’s needed.
      My OH travels and stays in Hilton for business. She pays the bill and reclaims once home. The idea she would subsidise her employers via this card is nuts to us. Better use BAPP get 1.5 points per £ and the FX fee paid by employer.

      For personal travel the free Halifax Clarity card works and we have chase with a modest cash back. If you put £6000 a year through a 3% FX card the you can recoup the fee but have to have that cash immediately available.

      I can see it works for some but it’s really quite niche.

      Was this the big announcement we have been teased about?

      • JDB says:

        @Paul – what’s “rip off Britain” about this card? It’s probably a popular type of small minded cliché in the Express or similar insular publications, but doesn’t really bear analysis.

      • BBbetter says:

        You have a choice to not get this card. Nobody is forcing you to get it. Its not like you have just one convenience shop within 5 miles and they charge 5 quid for a beer can.

        • Rob says:

          If they did, to be fair, you could have Deliveroo deliver the beer and have Amex Gold pay the £5!

          Last month we had Deliveroo bring us a £3 baking item because mid-cooking we realised we didn’t have something. Deliveroo brought it from Waitrose within 15 minutes, charged us £4 delivery and Amex Gold rebated £5!

      • patrick says:

        Life must be a relentlessly miserable, negative process for some.

        • JDB says:

          @patrick – I’m glad you said it as I would be told off here! When I read the same people posting relentlessly miserable stuff, rarely based on reality or fact, I feel quite sorry for their partner if they have one.

    • Christian says:

      Likewise, Amex Japan HH has a standard (and premium) HH card. Standard annual fee of £85 but offers Gold status, £1.5k~ spend 10k points SUB, free weekend night coupon for annual use of £8k~, and a domestic earn rate similar to UK Premium Debit.

      Within the country, given you have free debit cards like Chase UK these new cards are not very enticing. Interested to see what the upcoming Chase UK CCs will be.

  • Can2 says:

    I hardly think that most people who could truly benefit from it would have any idea about currensea.

  • San Carey says:

    How is this staking up to Monzo bank though? Why would I pay for a currency card? Am I missing something?

    I am seeing little benefit here. I don’t eat breakfast and tbh I find I stay in too many different brands to be loyal to one

    • Jose Marques says:

      I agree, my hotel stays come with breakfast, but I never eat it. I don’t know how people can keep eating—eating at the hotel breakfast, eating at the airport lounge, and eating on board the plane.

    • BBbetter says:

      The problem is linking free breakfast to fx fee free spending, which is available for free to many.
      Poor choice of benefits imo.

    • Peter K says:

      @San Carey.
      A hotel loyalty debit card designed to encourage spend and stays at their specific brand doesn’t appeal to you, someone who doesn’t stay at one brand enough to be loyal to it?

      Yes, I would say you definitely are missing something in this offering!

  • tootsci says:

    I think this is an interesting idea, but with an underwhelming earn rate and SUB, it’s a no from me. Especially as I already get 0%FX with my Chase account. You’re basically paying £150 for Gold status. The points you’d earn from the SUB plus the points you’d get on spend to hit the sub would mean you’d be paying 0.9p per point (not had my coffee yet, DYOR) which isn’t good. Though that doesn’t factor in any points you’d get from Hilton stays where the 80% you get from Gold status would boost that. So if you have some Hilton stays planned you will get some benefit, particularly in the first year, but otherwise I don’t see much appeal in this unfortunately.

  • Freddy says:

    Should have made the basic card free, can’t see who’d go for that card

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

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