Official: Major Hilton Honors Elite Status Changes, New Diamond Reserve Tier

Official: Major Hilton Honors Elite Status Changes, New Diamond Reserve Tier

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A couple of weeks ago, there started to be rumors that Hilton Honors was planning some major changes to its elite status program, thanks to some leaked documents. Well, all of the details have now been announced, and there are some major updates. They’re a mixed bag, and while some people will be really happy, others won’t be.

Hilton Honors elite status changes coming in 2026

Hilton Honors is overhauling its elite status program as of 2026 (so this applies for 2026 activity, which would count toward status earned for 2027). These changes revolve largely around elite status requirements, plus there’s a new top tier elite status. Let’s cover the various details…

Hilton Honors lowering elite status requirements

Starting in 2026, Hilton Honors is updating requirements to qualify for elite status. In addition to the actual number of nights or stays required for status changing, you’ll also notice that elite status can now be earned based on spending rather than based on how many qualifying points you earn.

Specifically, elite requirements for 2026 will be as follows:

  • Hilton Honors Silver status will require 10 nights, four stays, or $2,500 in spending (compared to 10 nights, four stays, or 25,000 qualifying points)
  • Hilton Honors Gold status will require 25 nights, 15 stays, or $6,000 in spending (compared to 40 nights, 20 stays, or 75,000 qualifying points)
  • Hilton Honors Diamond status will require 50 nights, 25 stays, or $11,500 in spending (compared to 60 nights, 30 stays, or 120,000 qualifying points)
  • Hilton Honors Diamond Reserve status will require 80 nights or 40 stays, plus $18,000 in spending (this is a new tier)

As you can see, it’s becoming significantly easier to earn Hilton Honors Gold and Diamond status. There are no changes planned to elite perks for existing tiers, and on top of that, it’ll continue to be possible to earn elite status through credit cards, as is currently the case.

Hilton Honors is changing requirements to earn status

Hilton Honors introducing new Diamond Reserve elite tier

As I referenced above, Hilton Honors will be introducing a new Diamond Reserve tier, which only a very small percentage of members will qualify for. Not only does this have a very high requirement in terms of the number of elite nights or stays you need, but it also requires $18,000 in qualifying spending.

The new Diamond Reserve tier will offer the following perks:

  • Priority for complimentary upgrades, ahead of Diamond members
  • Guaranteed 4PM late check-out, including at resorts and conference hotels
  • A 120% points bonus for points earning at hotels
  • Access to “premium” clubs (presumably at the few Conrad and Waldorf Astoria properties that have them)
  • Access to a special 24/7 customer service line
  • A confirmable upgrade reward every year, valid at the time of booking for a stay of up to seven nights
Hilton Honors has a new Diamond Reserve elite tier

Hilton Honors eliminating rollover nights

As you can see above, Hilton Honors is lowering elite requirements, though it’s not all good news. Currently Hilton Honors offers rollover nights, whereby any excess elite nights earned beyond a certain tier roll over to the next year. That’s being eliminated.

Rollover nights earned in 2025 will still count toward 2026 elite status, but that’s it. Starting in 2026, the concept of rollover nights will no longer exist.

Hilton Honors is eliminating elite rollover nights

Hilton Honors lifetime Diamond status gets downgraded

Hilton Honors offers lifetime Diamond status, which you can qualify for based on 10 years of Diamond status and 1,000 qualifying nights or two million base points. The only change to those requirements is that instead of being able to qualify based on two million base points, you’ll be able to qualify based on $200,000 in spending.

But here’s the bigger news, as I see it — Hilton Honors lifetime Diamond members will maintain that tier, and won’t be given Diamond Reserve. That’s fair enough, but I’m sure that’s disappointing to many lifetime members, since previously they were prioritized for upgrades ahead of “regular” Diamond members, but now they’ll have a tier above them.

The changes are bad news for lifetime Diamond members

Hilton Honors reduces points earning at select brands

As of 2026, Hilton Honors is reducing points earning rates at two of its limited service brands. Specifically, at Homewood Suites and Spark by Hilton, members will start earning 5x points per dollar spent, rather than 10x points per dollar spent. So obviously those stays will be significantly less rewarding.

My take on the 2026 Hilton Honors elite status changes

It goes without saying that these changes are a mixed bag. The way I see it, these program changes are a positive for:

  • Those who actually earn Hilton Honors Gold or Diamond elite status through stays on an ongoing basis, since qualification requirements are being lowered
  • Those who qualify for the new Diamond Reserve tier, since they’ll receive extra perks

Meanwhile I’d argue these changes are a negative for:

  • Lifetime Hilton Honors Diamond members, since there’s now an elite tier above lifetime Diamond
  • Those who earn elite status through credit cards, since there’s now an extra tier above Diamond
  • Those who used the rollover nights benefit to qualify for elite status

As someone who simply earns Hilton Honors Diamond status by holding onto a credit card, I selfishly am not happy to see the introduction of a new higher elite tier. That being said, if Hilton Honors wants to invest in actually improving elite perks for its best customers, then this is a logical way to go about it, and I can hardly fault the program.

The new Hilton Honors Diamond Reserve tier is a mixed bag. I’m impressed by the guaranteed 4PM check-out at all properties, and the access to specialty club lounges. However, just one confirmable upgrade still isn’t much to get excited about, given the requirements to earn the status.

These changes are a mixed bag for Hilton Honors loyalists

Bottom line

Hilton Honors is making major changes to its elite status program as of 2026. We’re seeing the qualification requirements for Diamond and Gold status lowered, though rollover nights are also being eliminated, so that’s a mixed bag.

Perhaps the biggest news is that there’s a new Diamond Reserve tier coming, which includes more bonus points, guaranteed late check-out, access to specialty lounges, upgrade priority, and more. That’s great for those who are actually that loyal to Hilton, though it’s less great for anyone who doesn’t qualify for the status, since we’re (at a minimum indirectly) being downgraded in priority.

What do you make of these Hilton Honors elite status changes?

Conversations (53)
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  1. Stanley C Diamond

    DCS can no longer tell us his diamond for life tier is the highest anymore. Not sure would he be upset or rejoicing. Soon, it will only be the third highest after the honors society tier and the diamond reserve tier respectively.

  2. Mark Guest

    I will not be renewing my Amex-Hilton card. Too much money for too little in benefits.

  3. DCS Guest

    There you have it. Other than so-called 'confirmable' suite upgrades that will be as tough to earn as the new Reserve status itself, Hilton Honors has simply formalized benefits that some of us have enjoyed for years, and made them more exclusive, which may or may not be a good thing depending on how consistently they are delivered by individual hotels. The downside of 'guaranteed' perks is that many hotels will see it as a...

    There you have it. Other than so-called 'confirmable' suite upgrades that will be as tough to earn as the new Reserve status itself, Hilton Honors has simply formalized benefits that some of us have enjoyed for years, and made them more exclusive, which may or may not be a good thing depending on how consistently they are delivered by individual hotels. The downside of 'guaranteed' perks is that many hotels will see it as a license to deny them. In that respect, the fact that LT Diamonds have not been 'grandfathered' to the new Reserve status can potentially diminish the consistency of perks that, at least this LTD, has 'quietly' enjoyed. However, with the Reserve status being quite tough to achieve except by true "road warriors", I suspect that we won't see a big difference in how perks are delivered for a few years. Therefore, as a Hilton LTD and a UA/*A *G for life who no longer actively chases top hotel or airline elite status, there is nothing in these changes that will compel me to hop back on the elite status 'hamster wheel' and go for the Reserve status.

    On the bright side, if these changes force certain self-anointed "travel gurus" to shut up once and for all about how "weak" the program's elite benefits are -- claims that have never borne any resemblance to this LT Diamond's long and vast experiences with the program -- then that will be a true positive. However, I will not hold my breath that this will put an end to recycled claims as that would be like taking a fish out of water -- it would die of oxygen deprivation!

    1. Eskimo Guest

      Glad you're still alive.

      I am disappointed that you're not pursuing Reserve.

      Without being top tier, how can you possibly claim Hilton is more than a mediocre program.

      I hope that $15 credit is enough to get you daily nutrition.
      Hot breakfast at Hyatt gets you a head start daily.

    2. Stanley C Diamond

      @Eskimo not the real DCS. It says guest not diamond. Also, he would usually end his lunatic rant with G’day.

    3. Xavier Guest

      "self-anointed "travel gurus" to shut up once"

      Then maybe take your own advice, but we all know you can't help yourself as the self-anointed guru

  4. UA-NYC Diamond

    Bwhahahaha DCS’ LT Diamond not so superior now!!!

    1. Mike Guest

      My favorite part is that Diamond Reserve added two perks (guaranteed late checkout and confirmed upgrades) that he said made other programs inferior. I'm sure, however, that if he were posting here still, he'd try and convince everyone that this now makes this status better than anyone could have ever dreamed of being.

  5. Golfingboy Guest

    Wonder how they are going to convert existing lifetime base points balance to $$. For a period of time all base points counted towards lifetime - is that their way of removing that from the equation?

  6. Hyatt The Best Guest

    It remains THE WORST “loyalty “ program in the travel Industry. And the Hilton Brand is lackluster overall and they no longer care .

    1. Chris_W Diamond

      I mean, I think it's a stretch to say it's "THE WORST"; programs like Choice, Wyndham, Drury, and Best Western remain less-than-compelling IMO. But of the big four in the US, for anyone spending less than $18K a year, I'd have to agree it's the worst of those. (But for the tiny, wealthy minority who *do* spend $18K a year, it might've suddenly skyrocketed to #1.)

    2. MarkG Guest

      How can Hilton be #1??? When you can get Hyatt Goobalist for more or less same nights or spend and get the double the suite upgrades and of course Hyatt points aren’t worth 0.000000000000001 cent.

    3. Chris_W Diamond

      Valid point, MarkG. I was thinking about how the Diamond Reserve guaranteed 4 pm checkout doesn't have any exemptions, so you even get it at resorts, convention/casino hotels, etc., so it's arguably better in that instance. But you're right - in the vast majority of cases, Hyatt Globalist is still better.

    4. Chris_W Diamond

      Well, I guess the other reason it could be #1 is simply the footprint. If you're looking for a hotel in a given city with several criteria (central air in the room, a pool and hot tub to use, a bar/restaurant on-site, etc), there's a good chance there's no Hyatt that fits your needs but there's at least one Hilton property that does (even if it's an old Hilton Garden Inn, Homewood, Embassy or something)....

      Well, I guess the other reason it could be #1 is simply the footprint. If you're looking for a hotel in a given city with several criteria (central air in the room, a pool and hot tub to use, a bar/restaurant on-site, etc), there's a good chance there's no Hyatt that fits your needs but there's at least one Hilton property that does (even if it's an old Hilton Garden Inn, Homewood, Embassy or something). So for those for whom Hyatt's footprint is a deal-breaker, who also spend $18K+ a year on hotels, Hilton might just work best for them now.

  7. Crosscourt Guest

    What connotates a Premiun Lounge? There does not appear to be a specific on that point. And they have given nothing to lifetime diamond which ive had a few years. The lack of loyalty, which we gave them by staying so many nights, is atrocious. Really poor form.

  8. Roberto Guest

    I'm Lifetime Diamond since this year and I'm very disappointed for the choice to dont create a special LIFETIME DIAMOND RESERVE status for those that are Lifetime Diamond at January, 1st 2026!! Something like TITANIUM LIFETIME that was created fro lifetime PLATINUM Starwood guests with a certain number of nights!! This approach of Hilton is incredible and is unfavourable for the LIFETIME diamond!! I hope that they re think to this bad situation as soon...

    I'm Lifetime Diamond since this year and I'm very disappointed for the choice to dont create a special LIFETIME DIAMOND RESERVE status for those that are Lifetime Diamond at January, 1st 2026!! Something like TITANIUM LIFETIME that was created fro lifetime PLATINUM Starwood guests with a certain number of nights!! This approach of Hilton is incredible and is unfavourable for the LIFETIME diamond!! I hope that they re think to this bad situation as soon as possible. All the LIFETIME diamond should write asap to Hilton Honours in order to ask the creation of a Diamond Reserve Lifetime status expecially for them!!!
    Thank you
    Roberto

  9. KFJG Guest

    As a Diamond via AMEX Aspire card, with no foreseeable path to DR for the rest my life (or Ambassador/Globalist/Premier 1K or whatever elite status) I would not be too upset about the change.
    Sure it may not "feel" good about no longer able to get the "top" status, but realistically how many ppl can really get the DR status with $18K spending AND--80 nights a year? Probably not many, & I doubt I...

    As a Diamond via AMEX Aspire card, with no foreseeable path to DR for the rest my life (or Ambassador/Globalist/Premier 1K or whatever elite status) I would not be too upset about the change.
    Sure it may not "feel" good about no longer able to get the "top" status, but realistically how many ppl can really get the DR status with $18K spending AND--80 nights a year? Probably not many, & I doubt I would meet those DR customer in a regular basis to compete for upgrades or late checkout, which never been a sure thing anyway.
    As long as FNC is being value the way it is & no other changes on all benefit for the remaining status I would just move on. Best strategy is the pair FNC with another night or 2 booking thru AMEX FRH or Hilton For Luxury if I want to stay in some nice Hilton properties.

  10. Polestar New Member

    Seems like the AF for the Surpass and Aspire credit cards should also be lowered in line with the lower elite status requirements.

  11. Rex G Guest

    After just reaching Diamond Lifetime status this last year, Hilton is devaluing this status to a big fat "0" Remind me again why I pointed myself to a Hilton property a 1000 nights to reach this status only to have it taken away. Bye Bye Hilton Amex, bye bye Hilton.

  12. PJOC Guest

    I moved Hilton to backup plan status about 5 years ago after decades of hardcore loyalty. The changes to breakfast and 'throw the dice' approach to late checkouts just made it all too unpredictable. The quality of their lounges..even outside of the US..has also degraded. The Hilton Metropole in London offers a stellar example of how the offerings have collapsed.

    1. Ralph4878 Guest

      The Metropole stay last year was by far my least favorite experience at a Hilton property over the last two decades. Sad what it has become.

    2. Crosscourt Guest

      That has always been an awful hotel.

  13. Davisson Guest

    Marriott mid tier platinum gives 4pm checkout guarantee. The one perk makes me stay at more marriotts than hiltons.

  14. 9volt Diamond

    Seems like this new tier is DOA. One confirmable SUA after spending $18k AND staying 80 nights? What a joke. Compared to Hyatt which gives you 4 SUAs after staying 60 nights without any spend component.

  15. Irishstone New Member

    I have Gold Status through my Amex Platinum. It’s provided reasonable value considering the large footprint of Hiltons.

    The loyalty & rewards universe continues to evolve. I’ll evolve my stays accordingly.

    Thanks for the update. I was considering the Amex Hilton for diamond status. Now I’ll wait and see.

  16. CF Frost Guest

    The experience for me as a lifetime Diamond was already devalued so much anyhow. I have been routinely denied upgrades on arrival with comments such as "we have too many Diamond members tonight". Plus with the loss of breakfast in the US the Hilton program is not enough of a differentiator for me to prioritize staying at Hilton except as a tie breaker.

  17. Steve K Guest

    Maintaining free breakfast for Diamond (at least Overseas) is the principal thing that matters to me, that said 100% Diamond points bonus matters too. Having this perk (breakfast) saves me about 90 Euro per night when I am in Europe.

    The US credit is nice (not as nice as breakfast) , but to be honest I use it for drinks more than breakfast.

    1. KM Guest

      90 Euro per night for breakfast? What the hell kind of breakfast are you eating?

  18. nycdawg Guest

    was already pondering about cancelling the Aspire given disappointing experience of lack of lounge and elite treatment, this just makes that decision even easier now.

  19. UnitedEF Guest

    So basically the FHR tier is still the one to beat no spend requirement other than the AF. You get guaranteed 4pm check out and as long as you are booked at the room tier right below the suite you will get upgraded to a suite. I've been upgraded to a 2 bedroom entertainment suite at the Crockfords in Vegas. Plus $100 property credit and daily breakfast for 2. .combined with the Aspire resort credit...

    So basically the FHR tier is still the one to beat no spend requirement other than the AF. You get guaranteed 4pm check out and as long as you are booked at the room tier right below the suite you will get upgraded to a suite. I've been upgraded to a 2 bedroom entertainment suite at the Crockfords in Vegas. Plus $100 property credit and daily breakfast for 2. .combined with the Aspire resort credit you will have a great time! So sad after a refresh they still can't beat a credit card program. Don't see the point of being that loyal unless it's for work. Even then I'd be booking thru the AA hotel portal and earning a bazillion miles.

  20. TravelWarr Guest

    Gotts say OG Diamond still looks like the sweet spot for me. UNLESS they start to dilute Diamond. Let's keep an eye on the lounge issue. While there are virtually no lounges in the U.S., there are many in Europe. Will those lounges be re-branded Premium Lounges and we lose our access? I just can't see properties having an Executive Lounge AND a Premium Lounge.

    1. Andrew Guest

      Ben, this is the question. Losing Conrad lounges for diamond members is a huge hit. Without lounge access, I probably wouldn't stay the Conrad in Cairo or Seoul.

  21. Daniel Guest

    Biggest miss is breakfast. $15 per person just doesn't cover a reasonable breakfast at most Hiltons, and that's my biggest gripe w Diamond.

  22. Bbt Guest

    So Ben, can you now compare Hyatt Globalist to Hilton Diamond +

  23. treyciford Member

    Really thought Gold and regular Diamond would have some of their perks tweaked for the worse, so this is a pleasant surprise in that regard.

    1. TravelWarr Guest

      Haven't been tweaked. For now anyway...

  24. Khatl Diamond

    I think, given Gold is now even easier to achieve, it's just a matter of time before they then announce that breakfast only becomes a perk for those with Diamond status or above.

  25. Chris_W Diamond

    So Hilton still isn't adding guaranteed late checkout or suite upgrades for any tier that doesn't come with a spend requirement (and hasn't fixed the US breakfast benefit, as Euro noted). Thus they remain inferior to both Hyatt and Marriott (and arguably IHG too) for the vast majority of travelers, myself included.

    It's a shame that these changes didn't include, at the very least, something like guaranteed 2 or 3 pm checkout for regular Diamonds,...

    So Hilton still isn't adding guaranteed late checkout or suite upgrades for any tier that doesn't come with a spend requirement (and hasn't fixed the US breakfast benefit, as Euro noted). Thus they remain inferior to both Hyatt and Marriott (and arguably IHG too) for the vast majority of travelers, myself included.

    It's a shame that these changes didn't include, at the very least, something like guaranteed 2 or 3 pm checkout for regular Diamonds, plus stronger, binding language in the T&C guaranteeing that (standard) 1-bedroom suites are upgrade-eligible for Diamonds, matching their marketing ("If we have a better room available, it’s yours – up to a 1-bedroom suite"). For now, they remain completely uncompetitive at any level below the new $18K one.

    The reduced earning at Homewood Suites in particular is also disappointing. They're one of Hilton's decent mid-tier brands IMO, with a decent footprint of locations with central air in the rooms (or at least the 1-bedroom suites) and a pool + hot tub. Now there's much less incentive to stay there versus alternatives. Now if you spend $100 at a Homewood Suites, you'll get a whopping 500 Hilton base points, worth about $1.50 to me since all their devaluations; what a rebate!

  26. James K. Guest

    No real change to the value proposition of being a Diamond (where overseas the free breakfast is a killer app for me) so I'm good

  27. Jamal Guest

    As someone who earns Diamond status through me and P2 holding 4 Aspire cards, this isn't all that bad. As I understand it, most of the benefits for an ordinary Diamond elite have not been changed. Sure, it is frustrating that there's another tier above Diamond for upgrades. However, getting upgrades on domestic bookings has been inconsistent at best for a Diamond member. It will continue to be that way. I also hope that Hilton...

    As someone who earns Diamond status through me and P2 holding 4 Aspire cards, this isn't all that bad. As I understand it, most of the benefits for an ordinary Diamond elite have not been changed. Sure, it is frustrating that there's another tier above Diamond for upgrades. However, getting upgrades on domestic bookings has been inconsistent at best for a Diamond member. It will continue to be that way. I also hope that Hilton properties abroad (especially in Asia) will continue to provide a better level of elite recognition, even for ordinary Diamond members. Finally, there's been no change in the Aspire free night certificates which remain one of the best benefits in the travel hacking game. Things could have been much worse.

  28. Euro Diamond

    It fixes some issues, for sure. For certain people. But the paltry "meal credit" is still there and hasn't been replaced with free breakfast or increased.

  29. 1990 Guest

    Let's see... spend $18,000 and stay 80 nights for 'Diamond Reserve,' or spend $550 on the annual fee for the American Express Hilton Aspire credit card, breakeven on that fee by using the 'free night' wisely, and get O.G. 'Diamond' instead. I'mm'a stick with the Aspire-to-Diamond pipeline.

    1. 1990 Guest

      And, if you really wanna maximize the value, listen up, folks:

      These days, P2 and I use each of our 'free nights' with Hilton, one between January-June, and the other between July-December, staying at properties where we also use the semi-annual $200 resort statement credit (we spend over $400, split the charges between the two cards).

      This is the way.

    2. Your daddy Guest

      Question I didnt see answered, does anyone know if you meet the DR requirements in 2025, will you have that status 1/1/26?

    3. Retired Gambler Guest

      No - only starts calculating new status in 2026 for 2027. If earn it in 2026 you have it but, as I understand it, there are no Diamond Reserves as of 1/1/26

  30. frrp Diamond

    Its okay until the hotels just reassign their lounges to being premium lounges.

    They really shouldve taken this opportunity to make earned diamond be better than credit card diamond.

    1. Fred Guest

      In the US, there are only one or two dozen lounges left.

    2. Eve Guest

      Yeah something along the lines of x perk can be accessed by staying 60 nights and so on would have been a more logical thing to do without completely making the diamond status seem perilous in long term because who knows when they start devaluing perks to differentiate between diamond and diamond reserve

  31. Hobbs Guest

    As an Aspire holder, had DR said, “OR $18k in spending,” I would probably have chased that status. Here’s hoping the Aspire is tweaked with a higher AF and more perks, a la the Platinum.

  32. Eve Guest

    Well this does not bode well for people like me who earns Diamond through stays. It was already tough enough to be loyal to the program with the unconfirmed late check out and the rare upgrades you get, alongside the horrendous points dilution and now this. I might just switch to the Gold I get with my Amex plat and stay there because one can only expect more dilutions of perks sooner or later.

    ...

    Well this does not bode well for people like me who earns Diamond through stays. It was already tough enough to be loyal to the program with the unconfirmed late check out and the rare upgrades you get, alongside the horrendous points dilution and now this. I might just switch to the Gold I get with my Amex plat and stay there because one can only expect more dilutions of perks sooner or later.

    A hot take but it seems a lot of how loyalty programs across boards has become worse over the years has to do with the US credit card market. Lucrative for the companies off course but at the cost of everyone who stayed loyal to them.

    1. MarkG Guest

      Why you...or any other human...stays as many nights with Hilton as the same needed to get way better hotel status like Marriott or Hyatt is one of the mysteries of the universe. Please enlighten us. Thanks

    2. Dwondermeant Guest

      I have been winding down my need for staying @ Hilton properties over the past years
      Primarily due to the greed of Hiltons points devaluation of its program.The biggest reason to leave Hiltons behind is the lack of late check out
      Finally HILTON Diamond just became the new HH Gold and Gold became the new silver
      Their breakfast benefit in the US is trash
      My business goes to Hyatt Marriott and some IHG All earned top tier with some actual benefit's

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

Daniel Guest

Biggest miss is breakfast. $15 per person just doesn't cover a reasonable breakfast at most Hiltons, and that's my biggest gripe w Diamond.

3
Khatl Diamond

I think, given Gold is now even easier to achieve, it's just a matter of time before they then announce that breakfast only becomes a perk for those with Diamond status or above.

3
Eve Guest

Well this does not bode well for people like me who earns Diamond through stays. It was already tough enough to be loyal to the program with the unconfirmed late check out and the rare upgrades you get, alongside the horrendous points dilution and now this. I might just switch to the Gold I get with my Amex plat and stay there because one can only expect more dilutions of perks sooner or later. A hot take but it seems a lot of how loyalty programs across boards has become worse over the years has to do with the US credit card market. Lucrative for the companies off course but at the cost of everyone who stayed loyal to them.

3
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