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Hilton Honors devalues its luxury hotels, now as high as 250,000 points

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Hilton Honors has quietly pushed out a devaluation of its top hotels. This is, astonishingly, the third such devaluation in the last 12 months following changes in December 2024 and May 2025.

As with the previous changes, members have not been notified.

Astonishingly, the points price of Hilton’s top properties has jumped from 50,000 points to 250,000 points over 12 years. There is an old article on HfP about the blowback when top hotels went from 50,000 points to 95,000 points per night, a price which looks a clear bargain now.

Hilton devalues its luxury hotels

There have been no major changes in how you earn points in those 12 years, although the elite status bonus for Gold and Diamond members has increased.

There has also been a major slowing of promotions. The summer offer was exceptionally weak – just 1,000 bonus points per stay – and there is no offer at all at present. This is the first time in a long time that Hilton has not run a back-to-back offer.

What’s changed? What’s changed is the volume of free points dished out to the US credit card market, which is fuelling inflation in the system. What is really driving it is the number of free night certificates, valid anywhere, which are being issued with US Hilton credit cards.

If a US credit card holder redeems a free night certificate at Waldorf Astoria New York when the hotel is over 95% full and the cash rate is $2,000 per night, Hilton is on the hook for $2,000, give or take. It has to earn that money back somehow, and you are paying the price.

Here are a few of the changes pushed through on Tuesday:

  • Waldorf Astoria Maldives – 190,000 points to 250,000 points
  • Waldorf Astoria The Palm Dubai – 80,000 points to 100,000 points
  • Waldorf Astoria Amsterdam – 120,000 points to 150,000 points
  • Conrad Tokyo – 100,000 points to 130,000 points
  • Conrad Maldives – 140,000 points to 180,000 points

To be fair, you should remember that all elite members of Hilton Honors get ‘5 nights for the points of 4’ on redemptions. This pulls down the average, although 520,000 points for five nights at Conrad Tokyo is still not a bargain if you are earning points from ‘heads in beds’.

After all, even for a Diamond Elite member, it would require $26,000 of base spending, before taxes, to earn 520,000 Hilton Honors points for five nights at Conrad Tokyo, pictured below.

Hilton devalues its luxury hotels

On the other hand, as a poster on Loyalty Lobby said yesterday – I have edited slightly:

‘If a casual card churner like me can rack up one million Hilton points from US card sign up bonuses very quickly, approving me and my partner willy nilly even after we just freshly dumped the cards in question, and then allowing us to combine the points for free, then anyone else can also do it’

These changes are very much impacting the top end. There is the odd 5,000 and 10,000 point increase further down the brand hierarchy but nothing major. A lot of these hotels saw increases in the December 2024 and May 2025 devaluations though.

Across all 7,000 hotels, the average value of a Hilton Honors points is probably unchanged from the 0.33p we claim. However, for HfP readers who are more likely than most to redeem at luxury properties, the impact will be harder.

I genuinely struggle to understand the logic. The only reason Hilton did its deal with Small Luxury Hotels was that members were pulling stays from cheaper Hilton brands because of the lack of luxury redemption options. Those SLH properties are now so expensive that they are out of reach of anyone who earns from ‘heads in beds’ and not US card sign-ups.

What about the alternatives?

I’ve seen a few comments from people saying that ALL Accor is suddenly looking good to them. When we started HfP 13 years ago, 1 Accor point got you 2 Eurocents off a hotel room. Hilton, meanwhile, wanted 50,000 points for a Waldorf Astoria free night.

Jumping forward to 2025, 1 Accor point still gets you 2 Eurocents off a hotel room – albeit that room will be more costly than in 2012. Hilton now wants up to 250,000 points for the same Waldorf Astoria free night.

You can also redeem your Accor points for any room at any hotel on any day, albeit suites need a big balance when you only get 2 Eurocents per point. Hilton is still only allowing redemptions into base level rooms. Marriott and Hyatt got it right here, with many hotels allowing you to upgrade a reward night at the time of booking for a flat fee.

Of course, unless you are converting credit card points, a hotel loyalty programme should be considered as a whole. It’s not just about what your points will get you but also what your elite member benefits are when you stay.

Hilton’s problem is that it also falls down here. Marriott guarantees 4pm check-out to Platinum and above (resorts excluded), Hilton does not. Marriott gives Nightly Upgrade Award vouchers to Platinum and above to lock in suite upgrades, Hilton does not. Marriott offers full breakfast at most brands, whilst Hilton’s F&B credit in North America doesn’t even come close to covering the cost.

Even IHG One Rewards became a real contender when it introduced Milestone Rewards a couple of years ago. Stay 20 nights and get a suite upgrade voucher. Stay 40 nights and get free lounge access for the rest of the year and all of the following year.

Something will have to give somewhere.

Comments (110)

  • John says:

    I regret buying 300k points in 2021 for a stay I had to cancel. I finally managed to redeem about 180k in April for cheap stays at the end of this year – and if I made those redemptions today it would cost all of the 300k

    • Marc says:

      DoubleTree Newcastle Airport was one of the 5000 point properties, I remember HfP running a story about someone doing a mattress run there a few years back. It was 20k at the start of this year before going up to 30k and then again this week to 35k…

      • NorthernLass says:

        I’ve stayed at that hotel a few times for under £80 per night! Reward stays are becoming a terrible deal.

  • Sandgrounder says:

    Remember when there were still 5000 point hotels in the UK and you could buy points and do a mattress run for $20pn with 5-4-4? Seems like yesterday!

  • Ziggy says:

    I wouldn’t rush to believe anyone claiming they’re churning US Hilton cards with ease and regularity. The t&cs for most US Amex cards include “lifetime language” which says that if you’ve held the card before and received a welcome bonus from it, you’re unlikely to get a second bonus.

    Yes, there are exceptions and yes there are US Amex welcome offers that come without this wording (you usually have to play around with a VPN while in incognito mode to find them), but even if some people are somehow still able to use these to churn, it seems unlikely that this is being done in numbers big enough to give Hilton a reason to keep devaluing its program.

    Further evidence for this is that back in the day when Amex didn’t have “lifetime language” on its US Hilton cards and when those cards were genuinely easy to churn, Hilton wasn’t doing what it’s doing now.

    I would suggest that Hilton’s frequent points sales which, up until very recently, would allow you to save silly amounts of money at some high end properties, and hotel owners demanding better returns as likely reasons for Hilton’s recent decent into miserliness.

    • JDB says:

      Americans seem happier to have a wallet full of paid cards than appears the case for HfP readers and there’s a far wider choice of cards, mostly offering higher rewards because there are so many fees sloshing around the system to pay such rewards. There are also just so many more Americans playing the credit card game and now travelling internationally in greater numbers spreading inflation in different ways.

      Also, ‘lifetime’ doesn’t always mean what it implies – six/seven years at worst?

      • Ziggy says:

        Yes, “lifetime” isn’t taken literally, but the gap is long enough to prevent rampant churning.

        To your point about Americans spreading inflation: I agree. The worst example being the ridiculous tipping culture that is spreading like a virus.

      • Nico says:

        “Lifetime” does not mean much it seems, dont know about hilton, but some you can do every few months and quite easy to manufacture spending also

    • Sam S says:

      Compared to that crappy UK Hilton debit card offering those US Aspire/Surpass credit cards are night and day. Even if it is once a lifetime SUB, they are usually around 200k points, that’s before you even get onto the other benefits – 400 dollars resort credit, diamond status and 14 X bonus points on spend at Hilton properties etc.

      I’m almost five years diamond with status earned exclusively through paid stays at Hilton properties.

      It’s a slap in the face.

      • Alex says:

        Amen to this. I’m 3 years diamond and my status has also been earned exclusively through paid stays. How are Hilton “rewarding loyalty” when an American who has never even stepped foot in a Hilton property is eligible to get Diamond simply by singing up for a credit card?

        I stayed at Conrad Ft Lauderdale a few months back; kindly enquired about a late check-out and they wouldn’t even offer an hour. I queried “oh, even as a diamond member?” and the front desk agent chuckled and said “sorry sir, 55% (yes, that accurate) of our guests are diamond today”.

        I need to reconsider my loyalty.

    • Rob says:

      Fewer redemptions mean less chance of a hotel hitting 95% occupancy to be fully paid for the redemptions it has got.

  • Talay says:

    From my perspective, Hilton are overpriced in cash terms and their points were largely worthless due to ramped up redemption numbers and now they devalue again.

    Just how stupid are people to chase a £10 free breakfast ?

    • Ian says:

      £10?

      Usually £20 plus per person. So could easily be £40 per night.

      • Throwawayname says:

        Being priced at £25 doesn’t mean it’s worth more than £10.

      • Ready2go says:

        But surely it’s limited numbers that pay for a Hilton breakfast? I get mine free but if I had to pay I’d go out and find a decent one

        • Rob says:

          Worth noting that corporate customers tend to like the F&B credit because they can use it for non-expensible booze at the bar, and paying for breakfast funded by their employer means more points earned.

      • CJD says:

        For £20 in a city hotel I would eat breakfast nearby. You’re getting absolutely stiffed for the crap served at breakfast at that rate.

  • meta says:

    Oddly, Hilton Tokyo has gone down in points
    on dates I looked in January and February (60-70k points). Earlier this year it was more expensive than Conrad.

  • HH says:

    Checking in to the Waldorf Seychelles this weekend. Booked at 130k/night, now going for 200k/night… These are pretty stark devaluations, it feels like hotels and airlines are completely moving away from making reward stays/flights actually rewarding.

  • William Avery says:

    Grrrrrr….thankfully used this for an amazing SLH in the Cotswolds this year. But the opportunity to return has gone now .

    The range of properties I found far superior to Bonvoy with the SLH brand added.

    Thanks Hilton.

  • Dace says:

    I gave up on Hilton as my main brand and switch to IHG when One Rewards launched. For me the writing was on the wall that Hilton would have to devalue with the amount of credit card holders I saw every hotel. Every lounge was also like a Team America convention and don’t get me started on breakfast.

    As mentioned above, Americans are travelling more internationally now and Hilton is the one most on the hook for it, owing to the how easy it is to get cards and status with Hilton there.

    This said One Rewards has suffered from the low lounge threshold, and it’s points caps have risen – although as a cost percentage I would say it has dropped from 0.5p to 0.4p since One Rewards started.

    Regardless, it is becoming more and more apprant that the days of matteress/tier point runs is pretty much over as the bars have all gone so high. Now all that is really left is to try and card churn in the states or focus on one hotel brand and value their offer rather than try and obtain best bang for buck on a redemption.

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