Hilton Honors Devalues Like Nigeria—Standard ‘Free Night’ Awards Can Now Hit 250,000 Points

Hilton just devalued its Honors points in May 2025 and in December 2024. And they’re done it again. And since they no longer publish an award chart, they didn’t tell members their points no longer go as far with the prices of many hotels increasing significantly.

Standard rooms can now be as expensive as 250,000 Honors points per night. That’s a 5x increase in 12 years or a quintupling in top award price. That’s approaching Nigerian levels of inflation – and outpacing Russia, despite massive world sanctions against that economy as it prosecutes a war on Ukraine.

Here are some of the changes that have been identified so far:

Hotel Old Price New Price % Change
Waldorf Astoria Park City 95,000 130,000 36.80%
Conrad Bora Bora Nui 150,000 200,000 33.30%
Waldorf Astoria Grand Wailea 120,000 160,000 33.30%
Eritro 150,000 200,000 33.30%
Sitzmark Vail 90,000 120,000 33.30%
Waldorf Astoria Los Cabos Pedregal 190,000 250,000 31.60%
Waldorf Astoria Maldives 190,000 250,000 31.60%
Conrad Tokyo 100,000 130,000 30.00%
Conrad Maldives 140,000 180,000 28.60%
Umana Bali LXR 95,000 120,000 26.30%
Waldorf Astoria Dubai 80,000 100,000 25.00%
Waldorf Astoria Amsterdam 120,000 150,000 25.00%
Conrad Hong Kong 70,000 85,000 21.40%
Waldorf Astoria Costa Rica 120,000 140,000 16.70%
Roku Kyoto 120,000 140,000 16.70%
Sowaka (SLH, Kyoto) 130,000 150,000 15.40%
Nimb Hotel (Copenhagen) 130,000 150,000 15.40%
RiverView Ranch Retreat (Montana) 200,000 220,000 10.00%
Lanson Place Hong Kong (SLH) 80,000 85,000 6.30%
Conrad Osaka 105,000 110,000 4.80%


Conrad Bora Bora

As you can see, there are individual properties facing increases of 36% here in one shot. I’ve valued Hilton points at $0.004 apiece and probably should adjust that down slightly.

Bear in mind that fifth-night-free still applies for Honors elites (even silvers) so a five-night stay at a 250,000 point per night hotel prices at 200,000 per night. And free night certificates still work.

When loyalty programs eliminate their award charts, they devalue much more frequently and much more significantly. It doesn’t have to be that way, but it always is.


Conrad Bangkok

The sine qua non of loyalty is trust – and transparency. These programs are inherently intertemporal. A program member is expected to behave in a certain way on the promise and expectation that they’ll be rewarded in the future. Like Lucy, Charlie Brown and the football, it’s just too tempting to the program to renege on past commitments when they don’t even have to tell anyone that they’re doing it. They just look at their books, and what their future expense liability looks like, and it’s too tempting to say “let’s reduce that.” W

When they’re numbers on a spreadsheet, and part of the process doesn’t involve going out to members and talking to them about the change, it’s easy to think in the aggregate – and not about trustworthiness, honesty, or even future business.


  • Crockfords LXR Las Vegas

    Hilton is already a laggard in hotel loyalty. Its elite program does not promise available suites or even guarantee late checkout. Their food and beverage credit in the U.S. frequently doesn’t cover the cost of breakfast. And base points-earning offers a lower rebate than other chains – they only make it up via promotions but their recent promotions are the weakest we’ve seen in years. Now their points are worth even less.

    What are they thinking, heading into a period of likely weak demand for hotels, since the program will be even less effective at putting heads in beds?

  • About Gary Leff

    Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

    More articles by Gary Leff »

    Comments

    1. The easier answer here is to shift to using AA’s hotel portal. Hilton elite benefits in the US are a joke anyway.

    2. “What are they thinking, heading into a period of likely weak demand for hotels, since the program will be even less effective at putting heads in beds?”

      That’s it, Gary – they’re not thinking at all. Every corporate move is reactionary, not proactive. I don’t know what it is with the so-called ‘suits” but they always seem to be driving while looking at the rear-view mirror.

      What a way to do business.

    3. Gary
      We keep saying 5th night free with credit card or 15% discount on Delta with DL Amex.
      All this becomes useless.
      Can’t have a room at 250,000 points or a TATL business award for 450,000 miles with a 15 % discount.
      They all can take it and shove it.
      Is Amex the real culprit here?

    4. With Las Vegas leading the way, many travel companies are doing everything they can to destroy loyalty and kill the pleasure of traveling.
      The folks managing these firms have an extremely short term bias. In the long term, this industry is facing many challenges which start with the destruction of customer loyalty.

    5. In the past 2-3 years, I have liquidated almost all of my hotel points from Hilton, IHG, & Marriott, & Hyatt. Circumstances in my life left me with more time and opportunities to travel, including being away 2 months in 2023 on an aspirational trip to Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, & Japan. My wife and I had a ton of hotel points we accumulated including over a million Hilton points . With our points now about run out, I sometimes wondered if we should have paced ourselves more. Not any more. With the horrible recent devaluations, I guess we made the right decision. Things have really changed in the last decade or so. Those days when we used Hyatt certificates at the Park Hyatt Tokyo while getting Diamond status by elite matching are over. I feel for those just now getting into the points game. They don’t know what they missed.

    6. Why the shock? It is supply and demand (more people chasing awards while cash prices go up) and currency expansion (you really didn’t think all those huge SUBs wouldn’t have an impact). They are doing what any smart business does – pricing their product based on what they think people will pay.

      Contrary to your view and others these companies don’t owe you anything. They have to look out for their bottom line and shareholders

    7. Way back when, it was 100K HH for a week in any Hilton in the world plus a rental car. Hahaha

    8. As Gary Leff points out in his article, along with the newly inflated 130,000 Hilton Honors Points for a reservation at the Waldorf Astoria Park City, Utah, there is a $50 Daily Resort Charge. This charge includes the following amenities: WiFi, shuttle service, lobby refreshments, s’mores, gym access and wellness classes, two bottled waters daily, PressReader access, ski valet storage and boot room access (winter only), or bicycle and hiking equipment storage (spring to fall), Oshibori (a cold hand towel infused with essential oil), and a daily beverage.

      For a reservation made today, September 9, 2025, the Hilton website specifies that cancellations must be made by September 2, 2025. Why would Hilton expect guests to cancel a reservation seven days in advance of their stay? Interestingly, once booked, cancellations at this Hilton property are not allowed. I wonder if front desk staff inform guests when trying to cancel a reservation with a dismissive remark, such as, “sucks to be you today.”

      It’s important to note that Hilton Honors Diamond Elite members are not entitled to reserved parking. However, for an additional $48.00, they can use valet parking. Regarding pets, dogs are permitted on the property for a non-refundable fee of $100.00, though no other pets are allowed. Therefore, it’s advisable to leave your emotional support cat at home.
      Suppose you’re looking for exceptional value at this Hilton. In that case, the $100.00 non-refundable dog fee covers more than one dog, meaning you can bring multiple dogs during your stay at the only luxury hotel with slope-side access to Park City Mountain. This is an excellent value if you are the musher entering the Iditarod Sled Dog Race with a team of 12 to 16 dogs.

    9. @Will has the correct take, especially when paired with AA Exec Card. Insane value there, and it still blows the new Atmos program out of the water.

      Every bank now wants you to use their portal for hotels anyway and, with the possible exception of the Hyatt Globalist gang, very few benefits of booking direct.

      And if AA hotels is too expensive, can also easily use sites like Agoda paired with Rakuten. Rakuten often has 10x MR points with Agoda (if not higher – yesterday was 12x I believe) and paired with a travel bonus card (RIP CSR, hello Citi Strata Premier at 3x for ‘other hotels’ which includes travel agents), that’s 13+ points/$ that have actual value (MR/TY) versus earning some Hilton pesos.

    10. @ Retired Gambler — They are certainy doing that, but they are hyper-focused on the short-term, which may hurt them in the long-term. Screwing loyalty account holders has consequences.

    11. I can beat anything on the list.

      Oceana in Santa Monica from 105K to 200K.

      90%. Read it and weep……

    12. @Jason is right; not sure why Gary felt the need to drag Nigeria into this (someone in Lagos is probably eating their jollof rice scratching their head…) If he was trying to draw the analogy to ‘hyperinflation,’ he could’ve said Zimbabwe, Venezuela, Weimar Germany, post-war Hungary, etc. Or, maybe he conflated this with the ‘Nigerian prince’ email scam meme. Perhaps, mixing metaphors was an attempt at rage-bait. Oof. So mad! Haha.

      @Gene — I’ll keep the Aspire until I can no longer redeem those free night awards (which, as far as I can tell still ‘work’ for whatever the ‘standard’ award is, even if it’s starting 250K.)

    13. This makes me sad. I blame Marriott!

      @Ken A — Solid imagery as always.

      @1990 @Gene — Yeah, wouldn’t this make the free night reward even more valuable?

    14. @1990 – I was trying to hew to actual inflation rates and not be hyperbolic in my examples. Hilton’s actual annualized points inflation is close to what Nigeria currently experiences.

    15. @Gary Leff — Niiiice. I’m all about hyperbole. Go big, or go home.

      @L737 — Like I said, I’m keeping the card until I cannot use the FNC. Besides, with the addition of all the SLH properties, it sometimes saves thousands on a night.

    16. This will devalue Amex points as well. They’d better increase the transfer rate to Hilton Honors to 3:1 or 4:1 to offset this.

    17. The Conrad Bora Bora increase was a higher percentage. There was lots of availability a few days ago at 120k a night. Now it is 200k/ night. That’s over a 60% increase! I just booked it 2 days ago for 5 nights (5th night free) for 480K total for 8/24-8/29/2026.

    18. Multiple aspires is the only way to go now. I still get decent value from that card as I stay at the Crockfords every 6 months for work.

    19. @ 1990 — You should get a job pushing credit cards. The free night is now worth MORE THAN EVER!!!, making the Aspire card a MUST-HAVE for all of the incredible value it provides! 😉

    20. @Gene — Nah, I’ll do it for free; and at least Gary is honorable enough to host our discussions on here, unlike those corporate shills over at TPG who disabled comments years ago because they couldn’t handle the heat! They still do those laughable pitches, like, this card’s worth $10,000 according to our valuations… psh.

    21. You do have to wonder what Hilton is thinking. There is basically no benefit to being loyal to Hilton now, and no reason to put spend on an AMEX Hilton card. So what’s even the point of having a loyalty program? Do they think the public is this stupid? This is obviously bad for frequent travellers. Aside from perhaps the Aspire card, the program feels dead. But it’s also bad for hotel owners. If I owned a Hilton, I would question what Hilton is doing to attract customers to my property. They seem to be sending them away.

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *