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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)

  • Tom says:

    The commission on flogging this dead horse must be top notch. Surely describing it as a ‘bargain’ is a false trade description 😉

    • Barrel for Scraping says:

      I hope they’ve blocked this page from the US otherwise some of them are going to die laughing reading this gushing review of such a poor card.

      • BBbetter says:

        They are more likely to be laughing at your inability to think the markets are different.

  • bibby135 says:

    Would this be better than the Clarity Credit Card? We always use that abroad. Feels better spending someone else’s money then paying it back the following month…Enjoy the protection of a credit card.

    However, it’s very tempting, this would fit perfectly time wise for our upcoming to Washington/Florida and would easily spend the £2,500 requirement.

    Is the £150 fee payable monthly like the Barclaycard Avios Card? Just pay £12 a month for that which equates to the same annual fee.

    • John says:

      Well you get some points for your spend while you don’t with the clarity. You don’t really need protection on things that you consume straight away, although fraud protection is always useful

      • bibby135 says:

        Exactly that…it’s more if you get your card cloned etc. Which I seem to get unlucky with for some reason! Haha! Would rather money be taken from a credit card as it’s not my money…and you get a credit back. Happened last month with £100 Argos voucher getting bought on my Clarity Card. With a debit card, it’s your actual money that is taken from your own account.

        I’m IHG through and through – Diamond etc. Not well educated on Hilton Honours but I’ve just checked that 30,000 points doesn’t get you much….Im on the fence with it.

        • John says:

          You can usually buy 30k points for USD 150, however it’s getting harder and harder to redeem them for USD 150 unless you must stay at a mid-scale Hilton on a night when it’s expensive and there are no other hotel options… or you truly value a £1000/night hotel at £1000/night etc

    • BBbetter says:

      A credit card is always better – many miss the protection aspects of a credit card.
      Btw, you can also look at the Halifax / Lloyds world elite mastercard, if you dont have lounge access already.

  • Harrier25 says:

    I’ve never understood why people still use Halifax Clarity, a credit card of the last decade, when there are much better options out there these days.

    • bibby135 says:

      Like? Please give me better options, all up for changing.
      Always thought it was a solid option…commercial exchange rate with no fees. And it’s a credit card so spending someone else’s money and pay it back the following month if I’m happy with everything on the statement 🙂

      • captaindave says:

        I’ve got a Clarity, but it’s really a backup card as I use a virgin atlantic card in Euroland, which earns a few points, the value of which is debatable nowadays…
        Clarity OK for long haul.

      • Harrier25 says:

        If you are unable to link Curve to a rewards credit card, then one of the two Virgin Atlantic credit cards around Europe and if you don’t already hold a Barclaycard, then the Barclaycard Cashback card for the rest of the world.

    • Definitas says:

      I keep my clarity card because, as a Mastercard. it’s a useful alternative to AMEX AND Visa. It has fee free foreign purchases and I visit family in the US for several weeks at a time so it works for me. Most import of all, I have a healthy credit limit on my card which was established before I retired. If I were to go chasing a “new decade” card I would invariably end up with a lower limit which would not suit my needs.

      • Harrier25 says:

        You’re just assuming you’d receive a lower limit but that is not always the case, and until you apply for a new card you will never know.

  • bibby135 says:

    So I’m clear – I only use it for going abroad.
    My go to daily card is my Amex BA Premium.

    • captaindave says:

      Wish I had updated my credit card portfolio as now I’m “sort of ” retired, the store is closed.
      Stuck with amex nectar, virgin atlantic basic and clarity.

      • BBbetter says:

        The market changes frequently, so even employed need to stay up to date. You can still apply for some using the retirement or household income.

      • RussellH says:

        I got a couple of Amex Golds and a couple of Starwood Amexes, as well as Amex rewards, a Halifax Clarity, IHG + Marriott mastercards from Creation and various MBNA cards since I retired in early 2014.
        Amex keep asking me to upgrade my Rewards card to Platinum too.
        I would have thought that being retired is no problem to getting cards, unless, I suppose, you still have a huge mortgage or your pension is so low that you almost qualify for Pension Credit.
        And I am sure that my income is on the low side for HfP readers.

        • captaindave says:

          Fairly niche really as we are living off savings until pensions start kicking in.

          Think we need some structure back in our lives though, so considering getting some part time work, hence the ” sort of” retired 😉

  • AndyF says:

    How long does the application take to go through, is it immediate? I have quite a bit of euro hotel spend coming up. I already have gold status but with the exchange rate plus points it maybe worth while getting one of the above cards. Also do i need to physcially be outside of the U.K the hotel in question has sent me an invoice in euros today actually so would that trigger it?

    • Rob says:

      Rarely hear of any issues because its a far thinner check than for a credit card. If you’re on the electoral roll etc which is an automatic validation then it should be fine.

      FX payment made as ‘cardholder not present’ will be fine.

  • patrick says:

    On Monday this place was full of people hugely put out that they`d missed out on a cheap purchase of a tiny room in a top end hotel. Today it is full of people denouncing an offer that, if used properly a high-end Hilton hotels, is a far better offer. I estimate that I will save approximately £1,700/£1,800 per annum with this deal and that does not include the return from cancelling Amex. Plat. Each to their own but, goodness me, the moaning.

    • Doubtful Thomas says:

      Maybe you haven’t got any of the alternatives. Would be great to understand how you calculate that saving. I fear it’s like Nectar Prices and unreal savings

      • patrick says:

        No problem – here is my approximate calculation. 5 nights x 2 breakfasts @ each of Conrad Maldives, Conrad Koh Samui and Amingiri plus the 30,000 points which covers approximately 25% cost of one night`s stay plus no FX fees, plus Hilton points earned on spend.

        • Have I misunderstood? says:

          Book via Emyr Thomas and get free breakfast anyhow?

          • Really? says:

            All the rates at Conrad rangali maldives appear to include breakfast!

          • Is this it? says:

            Ah. You must have tons of points to burn. Otherwise breakfast already included. And you are not already gold. So you earned the points a long time ago or on other credit cards

        • ken says:

          I think the argument is that the pool of people;

          1) having 3 x 5 nights in a Hilton in Maldives or equivalent.
          2) are booking a rate without breakfast
          3) who don’t have earned status through Hilton.
          4) Have sufficient Hilton points for 5 for 4 but no status
          5) Don’t use a Virtuoso agent or equivalent.
          6) Don’t have Amex Plat
          7) Don’t want to book a package with flights thats possibly cheaper

          just seems very, very small.

    • Throwawayname says:

      I like Hilton hotels but in most of Europe (UK and possibly Germany excepted) ,South America, and Africa they’re either inexistent or overpriced, so I don’t have much use for their status unless I do a big trip to Asia which doesn’t happen every year.

      On the other hand, using a hotel in London is something I could easily do most weeks.

    • Sam S says:

      You mention high-end Hiltons, presumably Waldorf/Conrad/LXR – Have you not heard of Emyr Thomas? You don’t need Hilton status at all if you book through him. You’ll get the same perks

  • Bob says:

    Does anyone know if the sign up bonus on the plus card is only for new applications or can you also get it upgrading from the standard card?

  • patrick says:

    For those inclined to look at things from a positive perspective, this confirmation might be of assistance:

    Foreign spend refers to any eligible transactions made in a foreign currency—including online purchases—so it doesn’t necessarily require you to be abroad.

    Many thanks,
    Mustafa
    The Hilton Honors Debit Card Team

    • KinZhal says:

      I have used this card since launch. I don’t plan renewing unless this promo (30k points) is applicable at the time of renewal of subscription.

      The alternative is to use the £150 meant for annual subscription for this card, to buy circa 38k points (in the regular double points purchase offer).

      It’s a card that clearly excludes frequent hilton users (Gold/Diamond) from Its benefits.

      The delayed debits are a headache too.

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