Worth $1,200? Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant Card Returns With All-Time High 185,000 Point Bonus

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Here’s the best-ever offer for the premium Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant® American Express® Card (see rates and fees).

It’s 185,000 points after $6,000 in purchases within the first 6 months of cardmembership. That strikes me as a pretty low threshold. And while a single Marriott point is worth less than an airline mile, 185,000 is pretty substantial – I estimate worth somewhere between $1,100 – $1,200.

This is a $650 annual fee card. However it comes with a lot. (see rates and fees)

  • Marriott Bonvoy Platinum status, plus 25 nights each year towards status (which can help you reach even higher status, plus count towards lifetime status)

  • Each year you receive a Free Night Award after your card renewal month, valid for a night’s redemption worth up to 85,000 Marriott points. Bear in mind that some hotels have resort fees that apply on free night redemptions.

  • Plus, each calendar year after spending $60,000 on eligible purchases on the card you become eligible for a choice benefit. The current list:

    • 5 Nightly Upgrade Awards
    • 1 Free Night Award valued at up to 85K points
    • 50,000 Marriott points
    • $1,000 Off a Bed from any Marriott Bonvoy retail brand

  • up to $300 in total dining statement credit each calendar year (up to $25 each month)

I don’t consider the card attractive for ongoing spending, but it’s got a great bonus and strong benefits. I believe I’ve only seen 185,000 points offered for this card once before.

For rates and fees of the Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant® American Express® Card, click here.

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 »

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Comments

  1. Gary’s valuation is accurate, especially after the recent Marriott devaluations; 0.6 cents per point is the new breakeven, which is not ideal, because it used to be closer to 0.8, and even more before. While you can find some redemptions at outsized value, like 2-3 cents per point, you’d have to go to really far destinations, like the Maldives, in order to achieve that maximization.

    As for the Brilliant as a ‘keeper card,’ it really comes down to how you use that 85K certificate each year, and whether you’re disciplined enough to use the $20/month dining credits. If you can breakeven on that, and enjoy the complimentary breakfast benefits with Platinum status (if properties even honor it anymore), then it works out. I’ve kept mine for years and years, even though @Gene will try very hard to convince you to ditch these guys entirely. Bah!

  2. This is a great offer except when you find out Marriott no longer cares much about its guests, it’s not such a great deal. As you’ve written many times, Marriott does not require its properties to honor the amenities promised.

  3. Gary and @1990 — thanks for the analysis! I wonder if Hyatt will be coming out with a premium card at some point.

    @Gene — hit @1990 with a “that’s a nope from me, dawg”!

  4. @L737 — I hope (for Hyatt). That’d be sweet, because currently the annual free night with the existing Hyatt card is capped at Category 4, and while there are still a few decent options, especially overseas, it’s becoming slim-pickings within the USA, other than at like a random hotel off I-95. Now, if Chase and Hyatt were to unveil a premium card, say $495 annual fee, includes higher status and a free night valid anywhere, then I’d open/upgrade in a heartbeat. I’ve got IHG’s and Hilton’s ‘premium’ cards, too, and, basically, it’s the free night certificates that make any of them ‘keepers,’ but you’ve gotta plan wisely on when/where to use ‘em (or you lose ‘em!)

  5. @1990 — With you on Hyatt! *Fry shut up and take my money meme* Aspire had been great for me – been coming out ahead even without accounting for the free night which is quite the cherry on top.

  6. Platinum is worth whatever you’d pay for 2pm checkout and a Sysco croissant these days.

    185,000 Bonvoy points will get you a week at a nice airport hotel by DTW.

  7. @L737 — “Are there any left?!” (The scene where that meme is from is actually pretty funny in and of itself.)

    @Connor — Oh, cheer up, buttercup. There’s far better options in Detroit, even with Bonvoy… I’ve stayed at the David Whitney, Autograph Collection, which was not bad, historic building, good location, honored the Platinum breakfast benefit with egg and cheese sandwiches, about 69K points. Niccce.

  8. 185k bonvoyable points will get me five nights at the end of September (Wedding Anniversary) at The Westin Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort. The points required would save $1,012 from the reservation cost…another $42/night in resort fees plus $58/night for parking brings my out of pocket cost to $500 for a “rewards stay”.

    A low valuation for the bonvoy points plus all the added fees keep me pushing to reclaim WOH Globalist status again this year.

  9. @L737 — Speaking of Futurama, in these situations (promoting various credit cards), I can’t help think of the ’80s guy,’ Steve Castle: The Brilliant card is… “awesome. Awesome to the max.” And also, “Blank? BLANK?! You’re not looking at the big picture.” Finally, “my only regret is that I have… Boneitis.”

  10. @1990 — “This [credit card] gonna shoot straight to the top and stay there, like Cindy Lauper! I ask you: [which] is the number one [co-branded hotel credit card] on earth?”

  11. @L737 — “You’re a shark. Sharks are winners, and they don’t look back because they have no necks. Necks are for sheep.”

  12. @ 1990 — You have apparently lost your mind. “Stay With Marriott once, shame on you; Stay WIth Marriott twice, shame on you, two”

  13. @Gary: Plus Priority Pass. However, it is not worth the $650 price now. The Citi Strata Elite has covered it.

  14. @L737 — “I’m proud to be the shepherd of this herd of sharks..”

    @Gene — I’m still willing to ‘spice things up’ now and again… sometimes, I just gotta overpay to stay a Westin in the Denver airport, ya know? Just to avoid the breakfast burrito because they charge extra for meat, per Gary’s review.

  15. @Daniel — Correct! Thank you. (At least somebody reads my stuff.) Let’s see… it’s the Delta Reserve that has the $20 slightly more restrictive ‘Resy’ credit. I think that’s what I was thinking before.

  16. As a lifetime Titanium member, the only incentive for a card like this would be the ability to earn Ambassador status without the absurd spending requirements that are impossible to achieve with 100 nights, especially with all the free elite night credits earned through having a Marriott credit card.

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