Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Hilton announces huge Wembley and FA deal – FA Cup finals tickets now biddable

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

Hilton Honors has officially announced its partnerships with the Football Association and Wembley Stadium.

It is a comprehensive deal, running for three years, but the quick summary is that tickets for major Wembley events, including the Oasis concerts this summer, will be available for Hilton Honors points.

VIP hospitality tickets (with the very highest level of Wembley hospitality, and the best stadium seats) for the FA Cup semi finals and final, and the Women’s FA Cup final, are already up for auction on the Hilton Experiences site. You can bid here, starting at 100,000 Hilton Honors points.

What does the new partnership cover?

Hilton has not been doing things by halves. It is now:

  • Official Partner of the England Senior Men’s Team
  • Official Partner of the England Senior Women’s Team
  • Official Accommodation Partner of the England Teams
  • Official Hotel Partner of the England Teams
  • Official Lodging Partner of the England Teams
  • Official Partner of St George’s Park
  • Official Partner of Wembley Stadium
  • Partner of the England Supporters Travel Club

We are promised “matchday experiences with stays at Hilton London Wembley, ‘meet and greets’ with women’s and men’s England legends and tickets for the biggest games and music events around, from the comfort of Wembley Stadium’s One Twenty Club.”

What is the Wembley experience like?

Some HfP readers, along with my son and I, went along to the Carabao Cup final (which I attended) and the two England internationals last month. These introductory packages were an astonishing deal at a fixed 115,000 Hilton Honors points for two people. Cup final packages in the same suite were selling for £4,000 for two looking at emails I received from hospitality companies.

It goes without saying that you enter Wembley via a private entrance with no queues. Parking is provided although I’m not sure I’d recommend driving there on a match day.

Hilton is using the One Twenty Club at the stadium. This is exceptionally high level hospitality – I can honestly say the lunch we were served was the best ‘hospitality’ meal I can remember. It easily exceeded, for example, The Courtside restaurant on Wimbledon’s Centre Court.

(If you’re bothered about these things, the champagne on free flow was Laurent Perrier Millesime 2015. Wine pairings were available with the mains – although instead of a glass they brought the full bottle over and left it with me!)

Here is a PR photo of the One Twenty Club:

One Twenty Club Wembley

Here, click to enlarge, is the menu we had:

One Twenty Club Wembley menu

Here is the view from the seats – you enter directly from the restaurant so its under 60 seconds walk. This means you can easily get back to your table at the interval ….

One Twenty Club Wembley seats

…. for a half time course of pies! This assumes that your lunch wasn’t enough for one day ….

One Twenty Club wembley

There is an extra treat at the end of the match. The path the players take up to the presentation gallery takes passes your seat so you can see them up close.

It was all very impressive. Note that I paid for my tickets with points in the same way as the other HfP readers did – this was not a freebie.

What can you bid on today?

Auctions have gone live for four packages – the two FA Cup semi finals and, perhaps oddly given that we don’t know who will be playing, the FA Cup final. The Women’s FA Cup final is also available.

All packages come with hospitality in the One Twenty Club as I showed above.

You can see the packages, and bid, on this page of the Hilton website. Note that, due to a long running IT issue, you will not see them if you go to the Hilton Experiences home page and filter by ‘United Kingdom’.

Starting bids for the four games are 100,000 Hilton Honors points for two people. Multiple packages are available for each game – up to seven of them.

Conclusion

This is a hugely ambitious set of partnerships from Hilton. By working with both Wembley and the Football Association it can offer both sporting and musical experiences, which is clever.

We’ll keep you updated with new events as they become available for auction or ‘buy it now’.


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 2025)

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

There are two dedicated Hilton Honors debit cards. These are especially attractive when spending abroad due to the 0% or 0.5% FX fee, depending on card.

You also receive FREE Hilton Honors status for as long as you hold the debit cards – Gold status with the Plus card and Silver status with the basic card. This is a great reason to apply even if you rarely use it.

We reviewed the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here and the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

You can apply for either card here.

NEW: Hilton Honors Plus Debit

10,000 bonus points, Hilton Gold status and NO FX fees Read our full review

NEW: Hilton Honors Debit

2,500 bonus points, Hilton Silver status and 0.5% FX fees Read our full review

There is another way of getting Hilton Honors status, and earning Hilton Honors points, from a payment card.

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

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton Honors 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.

Comments (38)

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

  • BOSSMANTRAVELS says:

    Another great option for Wembley tickets and can see these packages going for some big points totals. No packages for the big big final tho ‘The Vertu Trophy’ which is a bit disappointing as tickets are scarce!

    • captaindave says:

      Has that been renamed from the Leyland DAF Clutch Replacement Trophy?

  • Olly says:

    Any idea when the music events will go live?

  • zapato1060 says:

    Winning bids = Unrealistic + Unobtainable.

  • Robert says:

    Were the previous fixed price of 115,000 HHonors points not advertised?
    I doubt the auction tickets will be anywhere near 115,000, closer to a million points more likely.

    • Fazzy Bear says:

      Already 150k for the final and the teams are not even confirmed yet.

      • Rob says:

        But there are zero bids for the womens’s final and one of the semis has fewer bids than the number of packages available.

    • Rob says:

      It went live at 8am. We put up an article at 8.30. They were sold out by 8.45. Hilton asked us to remove the article because these were test events before the official launch, so we did. If you didn’t see HfP in that window you missed it.

      • Fazzy Bear says:

        If I recall, the England vs Latvia match didn’t sell at all when they were finally released.

        • Rob says:

          Yes, I saw that but Hilton didn’t want any external publicity by that point so we didn’t mention it.

      • Robert says:

        Thanks Rob, that makes sense. Glad you both enjoyed the day, certainly a memorable experience.

  • Rob H not Rob says:

    I wouldn’t waste my points on corporate sports junk.

    Give me a standing away end every time.

    Football is already losing its soul.

    • MKB says:

      +1

    • herewego says:

      +1 but remember that most of the HfP crowd don’t even like to stand in a queue at a departure gate

      • Rob says:

        We could, I agree, bring back the racist chants, random acts of violence and pre- and post-match hooliganism, plus the removal of all women and children from the ground, for that full 1980s football experience. As someone who was an 18 year old in Sheffield when Hillsborough happened I suggest you are talking complete nonsense.

        • Russell says:

          Rob, this is reductionist and unkind to the commenter. And bringing up Hillsborough is extremely distasteful given the number of inquests which have conclusively proved that it was a failure of crowd control by South Yorkshire Police, not hooliganism. Dangerous failures of policing can happen at any time – look at the Champions League Final in 2022 in Paris for example, where it’s something of a miracle nobody was crushed.

          I guess what I’m saying is that it’s not a binary choice of “hooliganism” vs “modern football in a posh lounge”. In 2025 it is quite possible to cheaply stand and passionately support your team as part of a diverse crowd, as millions of people do every week. Just not in the upper echelons.

          I know that’s not the point of the article, I just thought it needed saying.

        • herewego says:

          even for you, it is a bit of a step to go from enjoying watching football from the atmosphere of standing in an away end, to that list of prejudiced bs. Would hate for you to have to mix with the great unwashed. Perfectly possible to have safe standing areas at football matches, especially without police incompetence and bigoted attitudes to football fans.

          • Rob says:

            Given that I assume you’ve never been involved in aftermath of multiple deaths at a football ground, and I have (albeit 35 years ago) I suggest we’re not coming at this from the same place.

        • Sandgrounder says:

          Can you confirm Rob that you are not suggesting Hillsborough occurred as a result of hooliganism, and were instead talking about the poor state of the game in general in the 80s? This rather important to me and imagine several other readers too.

          • Rob says:

            I don’t think I suggested it did. I was saying that people who have this bizarre halcyon days view of football in the 1980s which they want to recreate are badly confused because it was a dump.

          • Sandgrounder says:

            Thanks Rob.

          • David P says:

            In fairness Rob, you were the person who made the connection between a standing away terrace and 1980s football. As someone who will be standing on an away terrace this Saturday, it’s rather sad to see you automatically make that link between hooliganism and standing at football. It’s perfectly possible to watch a game in a safe, diverse, environment with no racism or violence, whilst standing on a terrace. It’s also perfectly possible to think that football has lost its soul (especially at the top level of the game) whilst not wishing to return to the dark days of the 70s and 80s.

        • RobH not Rob says:

          None of that relates to everyone’s away day experiences nowadays whatsoever which was my point.

          I’ve had to put up with the corporate matchday through work a few times, and even watching my team, the smell of inauthenticity is everywhere.

          We’d best to agree to disagree on this one Rob, but i thought you were better than your comment.

          As I said and i’ll say it again, it’s losing its soul.

  • ToonFlyer says:

    What unbelievable value for that Cup Final!! What day was it advertised?… Had I been aware I would have subscribed in a heartbeat!! Irrespective of who you support, Rob, I hope you had a great day!….i know I did…oh, and we all stood through the whole match…the seats were superfluous on the day!!!😂😂😂

    • Rob says:

      Friday 14th February they went up.

      • Swiss Jim says:

        I guess some of us were otherwise occupied on that date and at that time…

        • Rob says:

          I was occupied but I still dropped everything to write the article (from a Pret on Marylebone High Street)!

  • ramsey says:

    Wow, 115,000 Hilton points is a bargain for that experience!

  • Sam S says:

    If only the winning bid would be anywhere near the 115,000 points

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.