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NEW: Get 30,000 points AND Gold Elite status on the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card

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For the very first time, Hilton has launched a special offer on the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card.

This card has proved popular with Head for Points readers because it comes with Gold Elite status in Hilton Honors, which means free breakfast.

For a limited period, it also comes with 30,000 Hilton Honors points. As these are worth at least £100, it offsets most of the annual fee for the first year. You will also get 0% FX fees when spending abroad AND a healthy amount of Hilton Honors points on top.

There is also a repeat of the special offer on the basic Hilton Honors Debit Card which ran earlier in the year.

You can apply for both cards here.

30,000 bonus points on Hilton Honors Debit Cards

Introducing the two Hilton Honors Debit Cards

In September 2024, Hilton Honors launched two new Mastercard payment cards.

Very interestingly, they were DEBIT cards and not credit cards.

As well as earning points, the cards come with Hilton Honors status, either Gold Elite (free breakfast!) or Silver Elite.

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, which is behind this card, you can still apply for these new Hilton Honors debit cards and receive the sign-up bonus.

A special deal is available on both cards

Hilton has just launched a special promotion on both cards. It runs until 14th August.

On the Hilton Honors Debit Card, which comes with Silver Elite status:

  • the annual fee is halved from £60 to £30 for your first year
  • you can trigger the 2,500 Hilton Honors points sign-up bonus with £500 of spending outside the UK within your first three months

On the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card, which comes with Gold Elite status:

  • the sign-up bonus is tripled to 30,000 Hilton Honors points from the usual 10,000 points
  • the spend requirement to trigger the 30,000 points is £2,500 of spending outside the UK within your first six months
  • the annual fee remains at £150
30,000 bonus points on Hilton Honors Debit Cards

The two Hilton debit cards in a nutshell ….

  • 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
  • The basic card comes with a sign-up bonus of 2,500 Hilton Honors points for spending £500 abroad within three months
  • The Plus card comes with a sign-up bonus of 30,000 Hilton Honors points (until 14th August) for spending £2,500 outside the UK within six months
  • Both cards come with instant Hilton Honors status – Silver Elite for the £30 card and Gold Elite for the £150 card. Your Hilton Honors account is upgraded INSTANTLY when you activate your debit card.
  • Status is NOT a one year offer – you will retain your Hilton Honors elite 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 £30 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.

30,000 bonus points on Hilton Honors Debit Cards

The basic card – Hilton Honors 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):

  • £30 annual fee (special offer to 14th August 2025 for your first year)
  • Silver Elite 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 2,500 Hilton Honors points. You need to spend £500 in foreign currency in your first three months to receive the bonus.

You can apply for the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

30,000 bonus points on Hilton Honors Debit Cards

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.

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

  • £150 annual fee
  • Gold Elite 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 30,000 Hilton Honors points (special offer till 14th August). 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.

30,000 bonus points on Hilton Honors Debit 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 you can receive from taking out a Hilton Honors debit card:

Gold Elite

  • Status is kept for as long as you hold the debit card
  • Gold Elite usually requires 20 stays or 40 nights or $7,500 of pre-tax spending in a calendar year
  • Key benefits 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 Elite

  • Status is kept for as long as you hold the debit card
  • Silver Elite usually requires 4 stays or 10 nights in a calendar year
  • Key benefits 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 Elite status you will still need to do the full 20 stays or 40 nights or $7,500 of pre-tax spending to become Gold Elite.

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

30,000 bonus points on Hilton Honors Debit Cards

The Plus Debit Card lets you ‘buy’ Hilton Gold Elite status

If you are wondering which card would work best for you, there is one group for whom the Plus Debit Card is a slam dunk: those who are happy to pay £150 per year for Hilton Honors Gold Elite status.

Hilton Honors Gold Elite is generally seen as the best mid-tier hotel status to have. This is mainly because of the free breakfast benefit, covering two people per room. In the United States, this is replaced by a cash credit which can be used against ANY food or drink purchase, although often it is not enough to pay for a full breakfast.

If you and your partner are doing 5+ nights per year in Hilton Honors hotels, paying £150 for Gold Elite to get free breakfast on your stays is a good deal.

This is before you factor in the value of the 80% points bonus on each stay and any upgrades you may receive.

Silver Elite status with the basic Debit Card is less valuable

Whilst the £30 (special offer for your first year) Debit Card comes with Hilton Honors Silver Elite status, this is less valuable. There’s nothing to get excited about in terms of benefits, although it is clearly better than having no status at all.

The only exception would be if you were planning a 5-night Hilton Honors points redemption. Silver Elite status activates ‘5 nights for the points of 4’ (all Silver, Gold and Diamond members get this) which could lead to a substantial saving on your booking.

Conclusion

If you had been interested in trying the new Hilton Honors Debit Cards, you may be tempted by these special offers.

This is the first time that there has been a special deal on the Plus card, so if you have been sitting on the fence then it may be a good time to jump.

With 30,000 Hilton Honors points being worth £100 on our (conservative) valuations, you are effectively buying Hilton Honors Gold status for a net £50.

You are also getting a payment card with 0% FX fees and which earns Hilton Honors points on your spending at home or abroad.

It make the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card a bargain, I think, at least for your first year.

(If you currently pay £650 per year for the American Express Platinum card partially to get Hilton Honors Gold Elite status, you may now decide to switch and save.).

On top of the Hilton Honors elite status and the bonus points you receive for signing up, these offers should be especially interesting to:

  • people with a lot of overseas spend who are still paying 2.99% FX fees on their existing credit or debit card
  • people who have a 0% FX credit card which doesn’t give any rewards. Switching to a Hilton Honors debit card may be worthwhile.
  • people who have a 0% FX card which uses the Mastercard or Visa exchange rate and not the lower interbank (spot) rate used by Currensea – see the PS. below
  • people who have a rarely used 0% FX credit card and would like to free up some credit by replacing it with a Hilton Honors 0% or 0.5% FX fee debit card
  • people with a large amount of Hilton spend, especially outside the UK – spending, say, £5,000 at a Hilton resort and picking up 4.5 points per £1 and paying 0% FX fees (on the Plus card) is definitely attractive
  • people who don’t meet the income requirements for some of the travel rewards cards we cover. Students, the retired and other groups may not have the £20,000 income required for an American Express card for example.

The special offers on the two Hilton Honors Debit Cards run to 14th August 2025.

You can apply for, or find out more about, the new Hilton Honors debit cards here.

PS. Whilst we don’t like to get too technical, the 0% FX fee on the Hilton Plus card is BETTER – by up to 0.5% – than most other ‘0% FX’ cards. Currensea, which operates these cards, uses the interbank (spot) exchange rate for most major currencies. Most 0% FX payment cards use the Visa or Mastercard exchange rate which is worse than the interbank rate.

Comments (98)

  • drdan says:

    Flogging a dead horse aren’t they?

    The market for paid-for Hilton Gold really can’t be huge…

    • Sam S says:

      Can’t for the life of me think why anyone would want to pay a fee for debit card which restricts you from paying your CC bills.
      Anyone wanting gold status are better off applying for Platinum (even with the hefty fee). Make full use of the dining credit alone over the 12 months and it’s already better value.

      I’m diamond so this card is no good to me anyway but nevertheless would still have been receptive to a Hilton credit card with half decent benefits. But there’s just nothing remotely exciting about this card.

      • Rob says:

        Don’t understand. If you’re not rolling a balance (and you better not be) why do you care whether it’s credit or debit?

        • Manya says:

          Section 75?

          • Rob says:

            Rarely an issue though – perhaps once a decade? – and there’s the Mastercard redress scheme on the debit cards albeit not legally binding. People were never worried about this when Amex Gold / Plat were charge cards.

          • The Savage Squirrel says:

            May be once a decade but I still bloody love S75. First encountered it when Maxjet went under (remember them!) – at that point in my life, 2 Maxjet tickets were A LOT of money to me. S75 really can be important!

    • Rob says:

      I think you are potentially living, as many HfP readers do, in a jet setting business travel bubble.

      I suspect 90% of UK employees who occasionally stay in hotels never, ever leave the UK for work. Their interest in an airline credit card is zero, especially when that airline only flies from London.

      It’s something like this or it’s a cashback card. My brother uses a Tesco Mastercard …..

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        You need to spend in foreign currency to trigger the sign up bonus. So these people who never travel for work and don’t live in London are unlikely to hit the foreign currency spend target in time to get the points to book the hotel for their holiday

      • meta says:

        People were not worried about Amex Gold/Plat charge cards because Amex had their own very strong dispute policy in place. And no it’s not once in a decade occurence.

        I have at least two disputes a year. You are completey divorced from real life if you think it’s once in a decade occurence.

        • Rob says:

          How can you have two disputes in a year? That’s crazy. What the heck are you buying? I honestly don’t think I’ve ever claimed on S75 in 35 years of having credit cards. Perhaps I’m just using more reputable retailers 🙂 I think my total card spend last year alone will have been, inc HfP expenditure (admittedly not covered under S75) about £300,000, all trouble free – or, if not trouble free, resolved without a S75.

          • Protected says:

            Just had 3 disputes in a month. Online companies sending duff product. No I wouldn’t risk it on a debit card.

          • meta says:

            You can’t honestly say that with a straight face. Your comment just shows how out of touch you are. Just last week I had an issue with Currys who didn’t deliver on time and refused to refund delivery charge…

          • Rob says:

            I honestly wouldn’t even know how to file a S75 claim. It seems I had 52 transactions on my MBNA Visa alone last month (which is the card I rarely use, since I have a VS Mastercard and multiple Amex’s, although my wife tends to use it a bit) so I am easily doing 1,000+ card transactions per year and have never filed a S75 as far as I can remember.

          • Talay says:

            You can fire ALL company expenses through a personal credit card to benefit from S75 but if you are uncomfortable with that (my accountants are not) then use the BA Accelerating Amex card and get 1.5 Avios plus 3 x 10k bonus Avios for hitting £20/40/60k spending each year and effective earnings rate of 2 Avios per £1 at the £20/40/60k level.

            As a credit card, it is covered under S75.

      • Inman says:

        I am one of the 90% UK employees who occasionally stay in hotels and never, ever leave the UK for work. I do take a lot of short trips (for hiking mostly) and holidays. I still see value in BAPP (for Avios collection) and Halifax World Elite MC (for lounge access) as they seem to be the equilibrium point for me and the other half. I truly fail to see any benefit even for the non-jet-setting crowd in this card, unless someone who is obsessed with Hilton and is willing to pay £150 pa for a breakfast subscription and some ancillaries.

        • Rob says:

          Where do you live though? Presumably in the BA catchment area?

          • CJD says:

            You’re saying that like collecting Avios for redeeming on Qatar or Finnair (both of which have direct flights to a number of non-London airports) are of no interest.

        • Talay says:

          Have you never discounted a Hilton because 2 x 5* breakfast costs would add £75 or so to your bill ? or £300 for 4 days ? I know I have.

      • Fennec says:

        The use case for this product seems very niche

        When travelling on business, the room will have breakfast or you’ll get a subsistence allowance to cover breakfast. Also, at any hotel, I use a credit/charge card with fraud, billing and deposit / hold issues.

        Not seeing how living outside the M25 or having no use for London Airways makes this more appealing either.

  • patrick says:

    The appeal of this will differ hugely from one person to another, of course. I rarely use Hilton other than 2 or 3 top end stays per year and have Amex Plat for that reason – I saved over £500 on breakfasts last week during half term. This is a terrific development, therefore – thank you.

  • patrick says:

    I must apologise the the positive content; I realise it is not really the done thing.

    • Fx rates says:

      So is this always a better fx rate than curve, mbna horizon, hsbc global money, revolut ? Who else gets interbank fx rate?

      • Rob says:

        You need to check each card for what rate they use.

      • John says:

        According to their website at https://hiltonhonorsdebitcard.currensea.co.uk/rates, the exchange rate on the £150 card is actually 0.5% worse than interbank and the £30 card is 1% worse than interbank.

        Mastercard rate is typically 0.25-0.75% below interbank, but since visa and mastercard rates are set in advance every working day, when markets move they can occasionally become better than interbank or much worse.

  • Doubting Thomas says:

    What is the point of 30k Hilton points? To use 5 for 4 you really need 150k-400k depending on your tastes. Any regular Hilton user would already have high status

    • Tired of ticket lotteries says:

      I think it’s the breakfast perk for occasional users who have closed their platinum cards after a few months and banked their 80k MR introductory offer.

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        How much is a hotel breakfast really worth though? They may charge £25+ a person but would you pay that if it’s not free? Near to most hotels are better reasonably priced options.

        • Rob says:

          You need a very understanding partner to accept being booked into a hotel where you refuse to pay to eat because you’re too tight.

          Solo trips, fine.

          • Barrel for Scraping says:

            Depends where you’re staying though. In the UK I’m generally happy as there’s plenty of bacon on offer, but overseas even at the four star level hotel breakfasts can be underwhelming and you can get something nicer for less nearby. If you’re staying in five star hotels it’s a different matter and then the benefit can pay off, but in many cities your options within Hilton are going to be HGI, Hilton, Doubletree or Hampton (the latter being free for all) and areas with a Conrad or WA are less common.

            I’ve often encountered it the other way round my partner being fed up that we always have breakfast in the hotel rather than the surrounding area because I want to make use of my diamond status

          • Ken says:

            You need an understanding partner if you insist on staying at Hilton over better and more convenient places just because a distinctly average breakfast is “free”.

            Clearly great if you are staying 5 nights a year in a Conrad & don’t have status.

            Just surprised they think the market is there for such a card.

          • Rob says:

            You are in the bubble of ‘airline cards vs hotel cards is a comparison set’. It really isn’t for anyone who lives outside the BA catchment area. These people don’t want a BA or Virgin card and this is an interesting – albeit imperfect – alternative.

            You also forget something very key.

            Because its not a credit card, the hotels can sell this product. By law a hotel is not allowed to promote a credit card to guests because they don’t have a credit broking licence. This is a product Hilton can very easily push to the exact people who will be interested in it.

  • Berneslai says:

    Still seems strange to me that a “signup” bonus is described as requiring 2,500 spend. There’s no bonus for just signing-up.

    • Lumma says:

      Other than the Virgin Atlantic cards, which are triggered with your first purchase, I think all cards require a spend target for the signup bonuses.

    • Rui N. says:

      That’s how sign up bonuses work in virtually every card ever.

  • Lumma says:

    If the basic card is 0.5% fee for foreign transactions and is supposed to be better than using a standard 0% card, how come the 0% fee card only saves “up to 0.5%” against a card that uses the interbank rate?

    Do people who spend £1000 overseas really care about saving up to a fiver on that?

    • Rob says:

      Currensea tell me its 0.5% but for fear of someone having data to show its actually 0.41% or whatever I put ‘up to’!

  • john says:

    Might be a stupid question, so apologies in advance. I can’t work out how I would easily spend £2500 outside the UK; happy for any very cunning suggestions as I’m sure there are things I’m not even considering.

    • Rob says:

      Go on holiday?

      • Ken says:

        So pay £150 for a card, then go on say a 4 night city break, make sure you pay on departure (probably paying more than an up front rate).

        Then you get Hilton Gold ?

        For a poor card, the insistence on overseas spend seems perversely self limiting the pool of people.

        Seems a little rich to accuse people of living in a bubble.

        • Rob says:

          Currensea makes zero money on domestic spend – they only make money on overseas spend where it can still generate meaningful interchange fees. If you’re not capable of putting through decent chunks of overseas spend you are not their target customer.

        • Barrel for Scraping says:

          It’s not overseas spend. It’s spend in a foreign currency. You could order stuff online from a shop that charges in Euros or dollars and get it that way. But if you’re overseas and pay in pounds then it doesn’t count. Rob needs to correct his article. It’s mostly the same but not always

        • John says:

          If the hotel is overseas it will still count as foreign spend even if you pay up front (unless it’s through a travel agent like hotels.com)

          • Ken says:

            Really?

            It says foreign currency.

            If I book and pay from the UK for a Hotel in (say) Madrid, the payment will be in Sterling – unless it’s a small independent hotel (which begs the question why you’d be that interested in a chain)

          • Rob says:

            Why would a hotel in Madrid charge you in £, unless you’re using Expedia or another OTA which bills directly? Hilton etc charges in local currency as you’ll see if you go through to the payment screen.

          • John says:

            I’ve noticed more and more hotels including some in Madrid try to DCC you

    • Throwawayname says:

      The most obvious way of doing that is by purchasing plane tickets. At least 15 of the 18 revenue tickets I bought as part of doing the SAS challenge were charged in GBP despite only one of them being on a UK airline and one (other) departing from this country. The conversion rates almost always come without any spread, and you also get the opportunity to consider taking (or at least threatening) MCOL action in case they screw up the service delivery.

      Among major carriers, I think it’s only the Lufthansa group that’s precious about issuing tickets mostly/exclusively in the currency of the point of departure.

      • John says:

        If you have a travel agent or there is no fee to book on the phone etc you can pay in GBP at the IATA exchange rate for most tickets, but many airline websites use a DCC scam rate to convert to GBP for non-UK points of sale

        • Throwawayname says:

          I haven’t noticed that DCC thing, probably because I always do my best to get a UK point of sale by buying on the British version of the airline website [in order to ensure that UK consumer law applies to the transaction].

          The only real issue I have come across is around the approach of Aegean to pricing – everything seems to be calculated in Euros and they charge ca. 5% extra for purchasing tickets in any other currency. I suspect that the notorious Greek banking cartel pockets most of the fees at the expense of both the airline itself and its customers.

          • Fennec says:

            Why would an airline that doesn’t operate in the UK always have native GBP pricing? They’ll either price in local currency only or at most give an indicative GBP price but bill in a local currency or major currency like USD or EUR.

  • captaindave says:

    I thought that Hilton had changed the terms of the Plus card ( when it was 10k bonus ) so that the required spend also included UK ?
    I’m off to Lanza for a break soon, but don’t think I would spend 2.5k in 11 nights as accommodation already paid for. Could hammer the duty free, but that’s always risky from the canaries……

    • Barrel for Scraping says:

      It did, not sure why it’s changed back. But I just also point out that Rob says spend outside the UK but the T&Cs say in a foreign currency. This is mostly the same thing, but not quite. For example would Gibraltar or Jersey pounds count as foreign currency – probably not. Also if you’re tricked into accepting an automatic currency conversion where you’re charged in pounds this also won’t count

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