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NEW: Get 7,500 bonus Hilton Honors points on your next stay with ‘Hilton for Business’

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Hilton Honors has launched a new small business programme called ‘Hilton for Business’.

The good news is that it is very slick and integrates perfectly with your existing Hilton Honors account.

There is also a carrot to sign up.

You can learn more about ‘Hilton for Business’, and sign up, here.

Hilton for Business review

This is how it works:

  • when you sign up your small business, you are asked for your existing Hilton Honors account details. Your ‘Hilton for Business’ account is linked to this.
  • the only requirement for joining is that you have a business email address which you must verify by clicking a link in a test email sent to you. There is no requirement to provide a company registration or VAT number. You MUST have a unique email suffix (eg ‘headforpoints.com’ in our case) and all your employees must have an email address with the same suffix. It is NOT essential that the address on the Hilton Honors account has this suffix.
  • once you have signed up, you receive a link to send to co-workers. By clicking the link, they can join your ‘Hilton for Business’ account and link it to their existing Hilton Honors account. To join, they must provide an email address using the company suffix and click a link in a verification email.

That’s it!

Hilton for Business scheme review

How do you book rooms with ‘Hilton for Business’?

It is immpressively simple. Going forward, when you or your co-workers log in to the usual Hilton website, they will be given the choice of whether they want to see ‘Hilton for Business’ rates as well as standard rates.

‘Hilton for Business’ rates are worth booking:

  • they are around 2% cheaper than Member Best Flexible Rate
  • you get a 2pm check-out if available
  • you get standard ‘Best Flexible’ cancellation rights, usually up to the day before arrival

‘Hilton for Business’ rates are NOT cheaper than Advance Payment rates. If you usually book pre-paid rates then you are wasting your time signing up for ‘Hilton for Business’.

How does it work for Hilton Honors points?

The guest receives their Hilton Honors points and elite night credit as usual. This is important – the person who stays is not in any way worse off by using ‘Hilton for Business’, and indeed is better off if they can use the 2pm check-out.

On top of this, additional points are accumulated in the ‘Hilton for Business’ acccount:

  • 7,500 Hilton Honors points (worth £25 on our valuation) are earned after the first stay is made under the ‘Hilton for Business’ rate (first stay per account, not per person on the account)
  • 5,000 Hilton Honors points (worth £17 on our valuation) are earned for every 10 nights booked in aggregate by employees using the ‘Hilton for Business’ rate
Hilton for Business programme review

The person who set up the ‘Hilton for Business’ account decides what to do with the points. You can transfer them to your own Hilton Honors account or you can transfer them to one of your registered employees.

You cannot redeem points directly from the ‘Hilton for Business’ account – they must be transferred to a personal account first. This is a positive point, because it means there isn’t an isolated small balance in the ‘Hilton for Business’ account which may never be used.

Conclusion

I signed up Head for Points for ‘Hilton for Business’ and I was impressed by how slick it was.

Because there is no separate ‘Hilton for Business’ website, I don’t need to mess about with a different log-in or password. I can control everything from within my personal Hilton Honors account. I also signed up my wife / our FD to see how it works from the point of view of an employee and it is equally slick. It is very easy to toggle between business and personal rates.

It’s worth registering for ‘Hilton for Business’ if you have a business email address and tend to book Best Flexible Rate rooms. You’ll make a small saving of 2% or so each night and you’ll get an extra 500 Hilton Honors points per night, albeit they don’t pay out until you’ve accumulated 10 nights.

The carrot of 7,500 bonus Hilton Honors points for your first booking is obviously worth having too!

You can find out more, and register for ‘Hilton for Business’, here.


How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Hilton Honors points from UK credit and debit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

There are two dedicated Hilton Honors debit cards. These are especially attractive when spending abroad due to the 0% or 0.5% FX fee, depending on card.

You also receive FREE Hilton Honors status for as long as you hold the debit cards – Gold status with the Plus card and Silver status with the basic card. This is a great reason to apply even if you rarely use it.

We reviewed the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here and the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

You can apply for either card here.

NEW: Hilton Honors Plus Debit

10,000 bonus points, Hilton Gold status and NO FX fees Read our full review

NEW: Hilton Honors Debit

2,500 bonus points, Hilton Silver status and 0.5% FX fees Read our full review

There is another way of getting Hilton Honors status, and earning Hilton Honors points, from a payment card.

Holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Hilton Honors Gold status for as long as they hold the card.  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton Honors points is 1:2.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Hilton Honors points.

Comments (18)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Jetset Boyz says:

    When signing up you are also asked for the URL of your company’s website – presumably to do a manual check with a view to weeding out accounts aren’t eligible.

    • Ian says:

      Surely that would be the same as your email address?

      • Bagoly says:

        Usually, but not always.
        E.g. for Royal Brunei Airlines, the website is flyroyalbrunei.com but the email domain is rba.com.bn
        Tends to be a few large companies (particularly those that provide email services to the public) but small businesses can do it too.
        Particularly if you have multiple client-facing websites, but one legal entity and use the domain of the latter for your emails.

  • Ian says:

    What I did notice when I tried it was there does not seem to be any mention of a business rate in the prices on the website (despite the option selected) , yet looking via the app and selecting the special rate there is. Must reselect on every search however.

    The rate saves a pound or two off the Hilton members rate but it is higher than the semi-flexible rate which I often use.

    So for me it doesn’t save money over the 5 day cancellable rate.

    The rate is discounted from the non members rate I think

    I am assuming that invoices from the hotel will show the company name, which might cause an issue if claiming back from another company.

  • @mkcol says:

    I’m guessing “stay” was missed from the headline 🤔

  • paulg0 says:

    Registration doesn’t work for domain names with a suffix longer that 3 characters which is annoying. My business domain used to end with .eu which recently had to change to .tech courtesy of Brexit.

    • Bagoly says:

      Programmers add all sorts of limitations (I use single-character subdomains to group my incoming mails which various sites object to) because the standards re email allow too much complexity.
      What I find extraordinary is the attitude “regex is the wrong approach because possible email addresses are too complex” as though email address formats are a creation of nature or a god, rather than “let’s change the standards so that one can use regex”.

  • KP says:

    Seriously never understood who books non-refundable rates? Unless they’re one-night super-cheap rates, I would never book a luxury hotel non-refundable.

    • Rob says:

      I agree, it’s probably a false economy overall – even if you save 10% you only need 1 in 10 trips to go wrong to lose out. I’ve just booked a Hilton for a half term trip and it’s refundable ,,,, flights are on Avios so if one of us gets ill or a work crisis comes up we can pull it.

    • Bagoly says:

      I regard the non-flexible rate as the base, and the flexible rate as being the base plus an insurance premium.
      If the hotel is charging a lot for that, and it’s cheaper to get that insurance from travel insurance or by self-insuring, then it makes sense.
      At 5%, buy the insurance from the hotel; at 200% (I remember paying EUR250 through booking.com rather than EUR800), then don’t buy from the hotel.

      There is also the technique many here have probably done which is to book flexible way ahead when plans are uncertain. And then a week ahead if it is (still) materially cheaper, switch to non-flexible, on the grounds that the chance of needing to cancel is much reduced, and so reasonable to self-insure.

  • Ian says:

    Just tried to update an existing booking with the rate and got

    Invalid program accountid

    So not working via the app

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    Sweet. Always the chance there will be the odd promo specific to this program in future too.

  • Paul B says:

    Maybe a silly question, however I assume this stacks with all ‘personal’ promos?

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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