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Hilton Honors devalues redemptions at top hotels – where does outsize value remain?

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Hilton Honors appears to have snuck through a series of points price increases at some of its very top properties.

It only appears to impact a small percentage of hotels, although the impact on the luxury portfolio is noticeable.

Some are untouched, even where they offer outsize value. I have a 150,000 points booking for the autumn at Waldorf Astoria New York, for example, and this is unchanged despite the $1,500+ cash rate.

Hilton Honors devalues redemptions at top hotels

There seems little evidence of increases further down the chain. A booking I have at Graduate Cambridge remains 60,000 points, for example.

Here are a few examples:

  • Waldorf Astoria Maldives Ithaafushi – up to 200,000 points from 150,000
  • Hermitage Bay, Antigua (Small Luxury Hotels) – up to 190,000 points from 150,000
  • Conrad Maldives Rangali Island – up to 140,000 points from 120,000
  • Waldorf Astoria Los Cabos Pedregal – up to 190,000 points from 150,000
  • Waldorf Astorial Platte Island Seychelles (image below) – up to 150,000 points from 130,000
  • Canaves Oia Suites, Santorini (Small Luxury Hotels) – up to 190,000 points from 130,000
  • Le Grand Bellevue, Gstaad (Small Luxury Hotels) – up to 190,000 points from 110,000

We’re not going back so many year to remember when the cap was 95,000 points per night. Heck, go back just over a decade and the cap was 50,000 points per night.

It also puts the current bonus points promotion of 1,000 points per stay into perspective ….

There are a few caveats here:

  • These properties generally remain outsize value for Hilton Honors points, given our target redemption value of 0.33p. You will still easily exceed that at the properties above in peak season.
  • Hilton offers ‘5-4-4’ on redemptions to anyone with Silver status or higher, so the rate is effectively 20% lower than the number above if you book five nights.
  • The economics with Small Luxury Hotels are still crazily bad for Hilton. I know from talking to SLH management that Hilton is paying close to the cash rate when you redeem for their properties. Hilton-branded hotels, on the other hand, are forced under their management contract to give away reward nights for, basically, marginal cost unless the hotel is full.
Hilton Honors devalues redemptions at top hotels

There are two core fundamental problems though:

  • Hilton continues to give away annual free night vouchers – with NO restrictions – on some US credit cards. The cost of fulfilling these vouchers at SLH properties or high occupancy Hilton properties is huge and is probably impacting the economics of the programme.

The bottom line is that the US credit card market is making things worse for a) everyone who lives outside the US and b) those people in the US who do ‘heads in beds’ but don’t participate in card churning.

Which hotel programme is the best for ‘outsize’ value?

In terms of the ease of getting outsize value from your hotel points, Hilton has now lost a bit of ground against Marriott. My order would be:

  • World of Hyatt – unbelievably easy to get outsize value because Hyatt still has published award charts. It’s the only hotel scheme where it makes sense to buy the maximum number of points you can each year (albeit Hyatt caps annual purchases at a low level).
  • Hilton Honors / Marriott Bonvoy – following these Hilton changes I would arguably put these two side by side in terms of the level of outsize value you get at top hotels. Both still offer solid value in, say, New York.
  • IHG One Rewards – IHG is moving ever closer to being purely revenue based. It’s getting far harder to exceed our target value of 0.4p per point.
  • Accor Live Limitless – this scheme is 100% revenue based (1 point = 2 Eurocents of free room) so it is impossible to get outsize value

Comments (72)

  • berneslai says:

    My summer holiday (USA) this year is the first time in 20 years that it hasn’t been arranged around hotels from the Hilton or Marriott chains. I’ve finally hit the tipping point where loyalty shown isn’t repaid through ‘benefits’ while everything is skewed towards Aspire holders. This is another negative change.

    It’s actually quite a strange experience booking hotels that are happy to offer free breakfast and parking at a reasonable rate.

  • Matt says:

    The issue isnt US credit card give aways devaluing HH, its devaluing the whole game, hotels and flight deemptions. Most noticeable for those outside the US. Thats why US airlines have dynamic pricing and, in the UK we didn’t, until VS decided too and look how stupid that is…..they are chasing the billions of points in the US, rather than the UK/EU.

  • Ben says:

    As a Brit who now lives in the US, the CC earning here is vastly superior to the UK – but you still don’t generate 1M miles without doing a lot of spending. I’d be curious to see if the ‘credit card churn and burn’ narrative is supported by data, or whether there are other factors at play. For example 10-15yrs ago there were vastly fewer resources available on how to earn and spend points effectively. You had to find HeadforPoints or scroll through pages on FlyerTalk to understand the tips and tricks. Now there are hundreds of influences making the information so much more accessible = more people optimising earning & spending points.

  • Nachoman says:

    Another devaluation in the loyalty industry and another change that just makes me stop bothering. I’m fortunate that I do have an aspire card and I agree that this continues to offer decent value and, bizarrely, makes the annual free night voucher more valuable. You now need several sign-up bonuses to rack up enough for a top tier redemption though. Forget about earning 200k points from ongoing spend. You would need to put $14k of Hilton spend or $66k of non category spend through the Aspire to earn a free night. For plebs like me that’s unachievable and anything but lucrative. I will gladly take whatever points I can earn from my 2 or 3 work trips a year, but I will not bother with points earning credit cards any more. Why would I when there are options to earn 4.5-5% cashback in the US? If I put 66k of non category spend through my US Bank Altitude Reserve (needs to be mobile wallet), I’d earn almost $3k in cashback. The aspire would earn me 2 additional free nights plus the points, but by the time I get there (assumes $66k spend in a year), we may have seen yet another devaluation and I need to find standard room inventory to redeem. Do the economics still work? They might for aspire if you are a heavy spender and if you don’t mind the faff. But there are clear opportunities costs. Putting the same spend through my USBAR is a nice and easy 3k cashback. Putting the same spend through an American Airlines credit card will get you a long way toward the higher statuses. So is Hilton still worth it for the average Joe like me? For plebs like me, it’s an emphatic NO.

  • Patrick says:

    The last time I’ve been able to make it work with Hilton was our redemption for the Queen’s funeral.
    40k points per night at the DT Kensington where cash prices were on the low 800s per night…

  • Daniel A says:

    This article is missing the biggest factor – Hilton is really into selling points. Pre-SLH redemption rates were largely tied to sale price, with few exceptions. Hilton is hacking away at the temporary outsized value created with many SLH. If you’re getting outsized value, celebrate it now because it’ll be gone soon.

  • Pangolin says:

    People love to dunk on Accor but since we’re talking of ‘loud Americans’ and their ability to fill up hotels and exec lounges with their endless bookings from credit card churn, one advantage of Accor in that respect is that it’s essentially non-existent as far as Americans are concerned.

    When I stay at Accor it’s almost as if the hotel had a policy – no (loud) Americans allowed here.
    Marriott is the polar opposite.

    • Rob says:

      Accor is also a lot stricter in how it dishes out status, so if you have it your (probably) earned it.

      Same with Radisson VIP via the Club Avolta match. So few people have it that when your turn up you’re treated like, well, the president (based on the photo a reader sent me today from the Presidential Suite at a Radisson he was upgraded into!).

  • wally1976 says:

    Loved it the other week when I was staying at the Hampton Docklands and one of their posters advertised Hilton Honours (including the ‘u’ ) 🙂

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