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2019年8月2日星期五

How I Earn 1 Million Frequent Flier Miles Each Year

business class airline section that you can earn through travel hacking business class airline section that you can earn through travel hacking
Updated: 12/28/2018 | December 28th, 2018

The best way to travel when you don’t have any money is to take money out of the equation. OK, not completely. While you can travel really, really cheaply, some money is required (unless you want to go hobo-style like this guy, in which case, this article isn’t for you).

But, assuming you don’t want to do that, you are going to need some money for travel. But you don’t need as much as you think you do, especially if you work to make your two biggest expenses — accommodation and flights — virtually free.

How?

By travel hacking.

I’ve written about it before, but I’ve never really broken down how I earn all those points and miles and redeem them for the business-class flights you always see me enjoying on Instagram. In this post, I’ll go into detail and provide the step-by-step breakdown of exactly what I do to earn around one million points a year — all without traveling! (When you add in the miles and points I get from traveling, it’s well over a million per year!)

This is going to be a long post, so get your coffee ready.

First, a refresher: travel hacking is the art of collecting frequent flier, hotel, and credit card points and airline miles and redeeming them for free travel. But it’s not about spending lots of money — the idea is to “hack the system” and use rewards programs against themselves to get lots of points and miles without spending a lot of money or traveling a lot. You leverage these systems to your benefit.

And it’s not just for Americans — Canadians, UK residents, Australians, Kiwis, and Spaniards can work these systems in their favor. (In reality, anyone can, but it’s just easier if you’re in these countries. So, while I will use the American market as an example, as that is the one I have access to, the principles and strategies I use can apply to you. Just substitute your local cards and programs for mine!)

One quick note before we begin (especially to the travel hackers reading this): in the travel hacking world, my mileage earning is pretty small. I know people who earn multiple millions of miles a year doing what I do (and a few other things), but I value my time, so why spend time earning miles I don’t need? My mileage needs are taken care of. I don’t waste time getting miles I don’t need.

Miles also lose value over time as airlines change their earning and burning rules, so I would rather have what I need and not waste time getting something with a decreasing value. Miles aren’t money.

Some people do this for the love of the game; I do this because I’m cheap and want to pay for as few flights and hotels as possible.

Here’s how I get those points and miles:

Step 1 – Sign up for credit cards

Credit cards are the tool through which you run your money in order to accumulate your points and miles. Think of them as the points-and-miles printing press. You can earn points and miles without them, but the process takes a lot longer and is a lot harder. To make this work, you will need a credit card.

When used properly, credit cards are smart financial instruments. You can earn hundreds of thousands of miles per year that enable you to travel for free (and they offer better purchasing protection than your debit card). Simply having them won’t send you into debt or cost you high-interest rates. Just make sure not to spend more than you have and to pay off your bill each month.

So the first thing I do is apply for a bunch of these credit cards. But I don’t do it willy-nilly. I have a goal in mind.

As a crazy travel hacker, I have more cards than the average person needs, but I always apply for new cards to reach a specific goal. Be sure to do this: think about the trip you want to take, where you want to stay, and how you want to get there, and then get the cards that help you get there.

If I’m low on American Express points, I’ll look for a new American Express card. If I want to go to Iceland, I’ll sign up for an Alaska Airlines card because I can use those miles to book a rewards ticket to Iceland thanks to their partnership with Icelandair. Moreover, I always look for what card offers the highest bonuses, even if I don’t need those points right away.

What have I signed up for this year? In the last six months, I applied for the following cards:

  • IHG – I don’t stay in hotels often, but I use hotel points for any last-minute stays I need or for conferences when I don’t want to stay in hostels. Since I’d never held this card before, I got the 65,000-point bonus.
  • American Airlines Platinum Business Card – Though I fly AA often and earn their miles easily, it had been a while since I had this card, so I applied again for a 50,000-mile sign-up bonus.
  • American Airlines personal card – Same as above.
  • Alaska Airlines personal card – Since Bank of America lets you cancel and sign up for this card again and still be eligible for the bonus, I sign up for this card every 2–3 months. This got me 25,000 miles.
  • American Express Everyday card – They ran a 25,000-point promotion so I finally got this card, as the normal bonus is 15,000 points.
  • Chase Ink Bold – When they offered a recent 60,000-point sign-up bonus, I applied for this business card as my charity FLYTE’s card.

Total points earned: 275,000

One thing to note about credit cards is that you can’t just sign up, cancel, and sign up again. Many card companies make you wait 18–24 months before you become eligible for a sign-up bonus again. (American Express only lets you earn the bonus once per card per lifetime!) I cycle through cards on a multiyear basis.

Therefore, I try to space out my sign-ups. I do two or three big credit card sign-up frenzies per year. This allows me to meet any minimum spending requirements (see below), allows the temporary dip the application causes in my credit score to go away, and gets me around any red flags the credit card companies have. For example, if issuers see you have applied for a ton of credit cards lately, they are less likely to approve you. Chase has something called the 5/24 rule, which states people who’ve applied for more than five cards within a 24-month period can’t get a new card from them. I’ve heard mixed reports on this, though — sometimes it catches people, sometimes it doesn’t.

Moreover, despite popular belief, having a lot of credit cards won’t hurt you. In fact, it can help you. Outside of your payment history, your utilization is the next most important factor in your credit score. Don’t worry about anything else. If you have $100,000 in available credit but only are using $5,000, that’s better than only having $5,000 in credit and using it all every month. Having more cards can actually help your credit score because of the better utilization ratio they create.

Here’s a list of credit cards you can sign up for!

Step 2 – Meet the minimum spending requirements

Each of these cards comes with a minimum spending requirement before you can earn that bonus. You just don’t get it for nothing. That meant I had to spend $11,000 in three months in order to meet the requirements and earn my bonuses! (The Alaska Airlines card comes with a fee of only $75 and no spending requirement so I essentially just bought 25,000 miles for 75 bucks.)

Here’s how the cards broke down:

  • IHG: $1,000 minimum spend
  • AA business card: $3,000 minimum spend
  • AA personal card: $3,000 minimum spend
  • Alaska Airline: none
  • American Express: $1,000 minimum spend
  • Chase Ink business card: $3,000 minimum spend

But my everyday spending isn’t anywhere close to that.

Since the purpose of travel hacking is to not spend extra money (you should absolutely not go into debt for this), I had to figure out ways to meet those spending requirements without incurring extra debt. Here’s how I did it:

  • In the US, you can pay your federal tax bill on a credit card for a fee of 1.87%. I don’t pay all my taxes during the year so that at the end of the year, I have to pay them in one large chunk. I then time that tax payment with a credit card sign-up so I can get the bonus. Yes, there is a fee, but if you work out the math, it’s worth it. That took care of a big chunk.
  • I time my purchases and sign-ups. If I have to move, buy furniture, need a computer, or join a gym, I sign up for a card and then charge my big purchases to the card.
  • I go out to dinner with my friends, pay, and ask them to reimburse me. I used this technique in Las Vegas, and that took care of the entire minimum spending for the Amex Everyday card.  This is especially easy with apps like Venmo nowadays, where they can reimburse you easily at the exact moment of payment.
  • I ask friends and family if I they have a big purchase they wouldn’t mind letting me put on my card. This doesn’t always work, and it isn’t always needed, but often friends and family will let me put it on my card as a favor, and then they’ll pay me instead of the store.
  • I manufacture spending for the remainder. This is when you move money around so that you artificially create spending through gift cards and money orders. You can buy pre-paid debit cards, turn them into money orders, put those money orders in your bank account, and then pay off your credit card. You have to pay a fee for the cards and money orders, but when doing this for sign-up bonuses, it’s worth the cost. I purchase pre-paid debit cards in $500 increments.

Note: As I incur a lot of business expenses, it’s easy for me to meet the minimum spending requirements for business cards (for the Chase Ink business card, we met the spending requirements by paying expenses for the charity). The steps outlined above were used for the personal cards.

Total points earned: 25,000 (21,000 in spending, plus category bonuses [see below] on food and office supplies; my tax bill represented half my spending)

Step 3 – Be smart with spending

Get category bonuses
In the movie Up in the Air, George Clooney’s character never wastes an opportunity to earn points. I’m the same way. I never, ever, ever just earn one point per dollar spent if I can get 2, 3, or 6 points per dollar spent.

Certain cards have what are known as category bonuses, where you receive 2–5 points per dollar spent. It varies by card, but generally, you get 2 points on restaurants, 2–3 on airfare, and 5 on office supplies. Here’s a list of the cards I use regularly and their spending bonuses:

  • American Express EveryDay Preferred: 3 points per dollar spent on groceries (up to $6,000 annually)
  • American Express Premier Rewards Gold: 3 miles per dollar spent on flights
  • Citi ThankYou Premier: 3 points per dollar spent on groceries; 2 points per dollar spent on hotels
  • Chase Sapphire Preferred: 2 points per dollar spent on food
  • Chase Ink Bold: 5 points per dollar spent at office supply stores or business expenses (up to $50,000 annually); 2 points per dollar spent on hotels

For example, if I am buying an airline ticket, I’ll use my American Express Premier Gold and get 3 miles for every dollar I spend. I buy gift cards at Staples on my Chase Ink card to get 5 points per dollar spent. I pay my cellphone on that card too!

Why get one point at a time when you can get five?

But there are also a few other ways to get bonuses, too:

Use airline shopping portals
All airlines, hotels, and travel brands have preferred merchants. These companies — ranging from clothing retailers to sporting good stores to office supply businesses and everything in between — partner with airlines’ (hotels’, etc.) special shopping malls. By ordering online through these malls, you can earn additional points.

You can use Evreward or Cash Back Monitor to discover the current best deals across various programs. Simply type in the merchant or product you want, and it will compile a list of bonuses the various point programs are offering at that moment so can you maximize the programs to purchase from.

Say, for example, you want new clothes from the Gap. Going into the Gap store gets you one point per dollar spent. By using Evreward, you can see that by going the United shopping portal, signing in, clicking the link to Gap, and purchasing online you can earn three points per dollar spent. Suddenly, you get 300 points instead of 100 for your $100 shopping spree!

Shopping portals 2.0
While purchasing online is great and can lead to earning multiple points per dollar spent, you can stack offers to get double and triple the amount of points! For example, if you go to Sears through American Airlines’ portal and buy a $100 gift card, you get three AA points per dollar spent. Go back through the portal to use the gift card for $100 in merchandise and get another three points for total of 6 points for $100 spent. This way you earn 600 AA points instead of the 300 you would have gotten if you had just made your purchase directly through the online portal in the first place. Remember, if you just walk into a Sears store, you’ll only get 100 points for that $100 USD purchase!

So if I used my AA credit card, I would get 700 points total (600 in bonus points plus the 100 from spending) or I could get 600 AA points and 100 Chase points if I used a Chase card.

Dining rewards programs
Just like shopping portals, airlines also have dining rewards programs. You sign up with your frequent flier number, register your credit card, and get extra points when you dine at participating restaurants in the airline’s network (which rotate throughout the year). It’s important to note that while you can sign up for every program, you cannot register a credit card with more than one. That means that if your Chase Sapphire Preferred card is tied to your American Airlines account, you can’t earn miles on your United Airlines account with that same card.

Join one of the programs in the Rewards Network (they run all the dining programs) so you can get five miles per dollar spent once you became a “VIP member,” which happens after 12 dines. So if you get those 12 under your belt (so to speak) early in the year, for the rest of the year you’ll be racking up five points per dollar spent!

A note on keeping track of all this: As I was writing this post, I went to dinner with a few friends. My buddy Noah was like “This is too much to keep track of.” That’s a common feeling among people looking to start travel hacking. However, it appears more complicated than it really is. Once you know what cards give you what bonuses, the next step is to simply use the cards that get those bonuses and meet your goals.

For example, as I mentioned above, all my airfare goes to my American Express Gold card. I get three miles per dollar spent, and this is what provides a bulk of my yearly AMEX points. For restaurants, I use Chase Sapphire since I get 2 points per dollar. For online shopping, I tend to go to AAdvantage shopping portal as a way to “juice” my AA account.

You never want to spread yourself too thin, though: having points all over the place will lead you to having low point balances in multiple accounts. I tend to stick to just a few accounts with my everyday spending: Chase Ultimate Rewards, American Express Membership Rewards, and Citi ThankYou points because they are all transferable to other airlines and hotels. (Note: Since I mostly fly American, I don’t worry about building miles in that account as I get them through flying. Most of my business expenses go to Starwood SPG so I don’t worry about building a balance there through personal spending.)

Total points earned per year: roughly 150,000 (spending and bonus category dependent)
 

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  • How To Pick a Credit Card
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Step 4 – Rinse and repeat on the manufactured spending

There are some people in the travel hacking world who manufacture spending like it’s their job. I have a friend who processes $10-20,000 a month in gift cards. That’s too much work for me. I’m busy and don’t feel like putting that much effort into it. However, I do a small amount of this in order to “juice” my point accounts, especially those with category bonus at Staples via my Chase Ink card that help offset the $4.95 fee per card. Here’s a diagram of how this works:

diagram showing how manufactured spending for travel hacking worksdiagram showing how manufactured spending for travel hacking works

I don’t do this every month (you can’t do it while traveling) but this helps me offset minimum spending requirements on cards and earn a few extra miles each year.

Total points earned per year: 150,000

(Note: I use my Chase Ink business card a lot at Staples. I buy Amazon, iTunes, and restaurant gift cards to be sure I maximize the 5 points per dollar spent bonus. The number above reflects not only the manufactured spending I do but the gift cards I buy too.)

Step 5 – Sign up for every contest, survey, and deal in the world

Airlines and hotels often offer points and bonuses for signing up for a deal, taking a survey, filling out a form on Facebook, etc. The points here are small (100-1,000 at a time) but over the course a year they can add up. United recently gave 1,000 miles to people who signed up for their dining program. American Airlines gave you 350 miles just for entering a contest to win more miles!

Moreover, I also use the E-Rewards survey program. Every day they send me surveys via email and if I have time, I fill them out. They take 5-20 minutes each. Each completed survey is worth a certain number of “e-dollars” that can be redeemed for points on a number of programs:

image s of companies that you can transfer e-rewards points to while traveling hackingimage s of companies that you can transfer e-rewards points to while traveling hacking

Point redemptions vary but $100 in e-rewards money equals 2,000 AAdvantage miles.

Total points earned per year: 25,000

Step 6 – Buy points/miles… sometimes

Airlines and hotels sometimes offer really good deals for points/miles and, if I know I am going to use them soon, I’ll buy them at a discount. This basically lets you buy flights for cheaper than booking them. For example, Lifemiles (Avianca’s membership program) often does a promotion where you can get a 135% bonus on bought miles. If you max the promotion out, you usually get 352,000 miles for around $4,900, but at that rate, you’re buying miles for 1.4 cents per mile, which is an amazing deal. (The closer you get to 1 cent per mile, the better the deal! Follow websites like View from the Wing or One Mile at a Time and they alert you to all these point offers, break it down, and basically tell you if this is a good deal or not.)

It may sound crazy to spend that much money on miles (and you certainly don’t need to do it at all), but let’s put it in perspective. For 90,000 miles, you can book a one-way first-class flight from the US to Asia. Since you spent 1.4 cents per mile, that ticket works out to be $1,260. Not too bad for a first-class ticket, huh?

Buying points and miles is a way to pad your balance and buy tickets at a steep discount. I do this sometimes if I’m traveling soon and know I’m going to paying for the ticket anyways (I don’t always use miles when I travel). It’s not free, but I would rather buy a first-class ticket for $1,260 than an economy ticket for the same price.

Sometimes travel hacking is about finding value and doing a bit of arbitrage to get more for less!

Points earned: 100,000 points

Step 7 – Cancel cards I don’t use

Airline cards have fees, so when the yearly fee comes due, I’ll cancel the cards I don’t use or that don’t have a benefit to me. For example, the British Airways card: I used it for the sign-up miles and was done with it. It was canceled. The Hyatt card? It has a $75 yearly fee but it comes with two nights free each year. That’s two nights in a hotel for $75. I keep that one. The American Airlines personal card? One of the benefits is 10% miles back on redemptions, so if I redeem for 100,000 miles each year, I get 10,000 miles put back into my account — well worth the $95 annual fee.

Canceling cards doesn’t hurt your credit score. Old credit lines help, which is why I keep my Discover, Capital One, and a few other cards around. They have no fees and high limits so they anchor my credit. As I said before, what is important is your overall debt-to-credit ratio. So canceling a few cards lowers that ratio, but if I have no debt it doesn’t matter.

Moreover, I also transfer the credit lines to other cards with that card company so that I don’t lose the credit (and that doesn’t even make a mark on my credit score, let alone a dent!).

Step 8 — Get a second round of credit cards

Twice a year, I go on a big credit card splurge and start the cycle again. I’ll look at what I canceled and what I need. Since many operators require a waiting period between bonuses, I’ll aim for cards I haven’t had in a long time as well as which have another sign-up bonus.

Then after I get the new cards, I’ll repeat step 2 to meet any minimum spending requirements.

Total points earned: 200,000-300,000

Total points earned: roughly 975,000 per year ± 50,000

(The above tricks don’t count all the miles I earn via business expenses, which add up to an additional couple hundred thousand miles a year, putting me well over one million miles earned.)

A lot of this stuff depends on time and effort. If I got more credit cards, I could earn more. If I spent more money, I could earn more. I just don’t care enough. I have more miles than I need. I fly my team around on miles. I fly myself anywhere miles. I give miles to my mom.

By using the eight steps outlined in this article, the sky is the limit on how many miles you can earn. It just depends on how much you want to ramp up each step. As I said before, my million miles per year is a small number compared to some of the other travel hackers out there.

It is possible to earn more miles than you will need to travel and fly for free. Even if you travel only once a year, just want to visit your parents, or aspire to take your family on one trip, you can do it.

Travel hacking doesn’t have to be complicated. It’s simple and accessible to everyone.

The Ultimate Guide to Travel Hacking
travel hackingtravel hackingFor more information on how to earn points and miles that you can use toward free travel, check out The Ultimate Guide to Travel Hacking. This book shows you exactly how to take money out of the travel equation and use frequent flier programs to get free flights and hotel rooms.  The strategies in this book will get you out of your house faster, cheaper, and in comfort.

Click here to learn more and start reading it today!

Book Your Trip: Logistical Tips and Tricks

Book Your Flight
Find a cheap flight by using Skyscanner or Momondo. They are my two favorite search engines because they search websites and airlines around the globe so you always know no stone is left unturned.

Book Your Accommodation
You can book your hostel with Hostelworld as they have the largest inventory. If you want to stay somewhere other than a hostel, use Booking.com as they consistently return the cheapest rates for guesthouses and cheap hotels. I use them all the time.

Don’t Forget Travel Insurance
Travel insurance will protect you against illness, injury, theft, and cancellations. It’s comprehensive protection in case anything goes wrong. I never go on a trip without it as I’ve had to use it many times in the past. I’ve been using World Nomads for ten years. My favorite companies that offer the best service and value are:

  • World Nomads (for everyone below 70)
  • Insure My Trip (for those over 70)

Looking for the best companies to save money with?
Check out my resource page for the best companies to use when you travel! I list all the ones I use to save money when I travel – and that will save you time and money too!

Photo credit: 1

2019年8月1日星期四

How to Earn Hilton Honors Points — and the Best Ways to Use Them

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Courtesy of Hilton

Mastering a hotel loyalty program can be the key to earning and redeeming points for fabulous trips all over the world. Travelers can rack up hotel points not only for stays, but on many other types of purchases as well, and then use them to book award nights at associated properties. In addition to free nights, hotel points can often be converted into airline miles or redeemed for experiences like concert tickets and sporting events.

Hilton Honors is one of the world’s largest travel rewards programs with over 89 million members, and more than 5,700 properties around the globe where those members can both earn and redeem their hard-earned points. Here’s how to make the most of it.

What is Hilton Honors?

Hilton Honors is the loyalty program of Hilton, obviously. But in these days of acquisitions and consolidations, Hilton now comprises 14 distinct hotel brands. Those include Waldorf Astoria Hotels & Resorts and Conrad Hotels & Resorts on the luxury side, Hilton Hotels & Resorts and Curio Collection by Hilton for mid-range travelers, and solid budget brands like DoubleTree by Hilton, Embassy Suites by Hilton, and Hampton by Hilton.

There are also some brands you might not have heard of, like the Tapestry Collection and Tru by Hilton, as well as soon-to-launch labels like LXR and Signia.

This might seem like a lot of information to keep track of, but on the positive side, it means more opportunities to earn and redeem Hilton Honors points at hotels in over 100 countries.

How to Earn Hilton Honors Points

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Courtesy of Hilton

Hilton Honors members earn 10 points per dollar spent on room rates and other eligible hotel charges (like dining or spa purchases) at most of Hilton’s brands. Stays at Home2 Suites and Tru properties only earn five points per dollar. If you have elite status, you earn more, but we’ll get into that below.

Hilton also fields three personal credit cards through American Express with which members can earn points on everyday spending. The first is the Hilton Honors American Express card. It has no annual fee and earns seven points per dollar at Hilton hotels, five points per dollar at restaurants, supermarkets and gas stations in the U.S., and three points per dollar on everything else. Cardholders enjoy complimentary Silver status, which is Hilton’s lowest elite tier. At time of writing, this card’s sign-up bonus was 75,000 points when you spend $1,000 within the first three months.

The mid-range Hilton Honors American Express Ascend Card has a $95 annual fee. For that, you have a chance at a 125,000-point sign-up bonus when you spend $2,000 in the first three months. It earns 12 points per dollar at Hilton properties, six points per dollar at U.S. restaurants, gas stations and supermarkets, and three per dollar on everything else. It also comes with complimentary Gold elite status, with perks like earning even more bonus points on stays, room upgrades, and free in-room high-speed Wi-Fi.

The high-end Hilton Honors American Express Aspire Card, with an annual fee of $450, was only introduced in 2018. At time of writing, its sign-up bonus was 150,000 points after spending $4,000 in the first three months. That’s nearly enough for two free nights at the luxurious Conrad Bora Bora Nui, which would cost 160,000 points or $1,500.

The Aspire earns 14 points per dollar on Hilton purchases, seven points per dollar on flights booked directly with airlines or through Amex Travel and on car rentals and at U.S. restaurants, and three points per dollar on everyday purchases.

Every year you renew the Hilton Honors Aspire, you also get a free weekend night reward good at nearly any Hilton property around the world, which can be worth hundreds of dollars. Cardholders also receive up to $250 in statement credits on Hilton purchases each year, a $100 on-property credit on each stay of two nights or more at Waldorf Astoria and Conrad properties, an annual $250 airline fee credit, and access to over 1,200 Priority Pass airport lounges around the world. Finally, the card comes with automatic top-tier Diamond status, which includes benefits like 100% bonus points on stays plus complimentary breakfast and club hotel executive lounge access.

If you regularly stay at Hilton properties, the bonuses afforded by its credit cards can really add up, as can the points-earning opportunities on everyday purchases. Just note that Hilton Honors points expire after 12 months of account inactivity, so in order to keep your points active, you’ve got to either earn or redeem some each year.

How to Redeem Hilton Honors Points

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Courtesy of Hilton

Speaking of redeeming points, Hilton Honors members can use theirs in a variety of ways. The first is by booking award nights at hotels.

Unlike some other hotel programs, Hilton Honors no longer has an award chart where properties are separated into distinct categories with set redemption rates. Instead, award nights are priced dynamically, meaning that if paid rates are lower on certain dates, you can redeem fewer points for an award night. Likewise, when paid rates are more expensive, you’ll need to redeem more points. In general, though, you can expect award nights to cost between 5,000-95,000 points each. For example, standard award nights at the sophisticated Waldorf Astoria Berlin range from 50,000 points or $230 per night to 70,000 points or $340 per night over the next few months.

Hilton offers Points & Money awards that allow members to use both cash and points on a reservation. Say an award night costs 50,000 points, but you only have 40,000 in your account. You can redeem the 40,000 points you have and then pay cash for the remainder of the bill.

For every 1,000 points you subtract from the regular award rate, the cash co-pay goes up by about $3-6, depending on the hotel. For example, on a night at the Waldorf Astoria Berlin that costs 70,000 points or $340, you could instead pay 35,000 points plus $175. This feature can be very handy in case you don’t have enough points in your account for an outright redemption, or if you want to save some of your points for the future and would prefer to spend cash instead.

Hilton also offers premium rewards where members can redeem even more points for upgraded rooms and suites, and those can cost hundreds of thousands of points per night. In general, aim to get about half a cent per point in value for any redemption. Hilton Honors Silver, Gold, and Diamond elites get the fifth night free on award reservations of five nights or more, which is a nice discount of up to 20 percent.

Members can use points for non-hotel experiences that range in value, such as Maren Morris concert tickets in St. Louis (30,000 points), or a 24-hour car-racing experience at Le Mans that includes a night of glamping at the Aston Martin campsite (350,000 points).

Finally, Hilton allows members to redeem points for Amazon purchases, but the redemption value tends to be pretty low, so avoid it if possible.

Hilton Honors Partners

In addition to accruing Hilton Honors points through hotel stays and credit-card spending, members can earn bonus points on car rentals with Alamo, Enterprise, and National; by joining the Priority Pass airport lounge network; or by booking a cruise through CruisesOnly. Members can also earn bonus points by eating out at restaurants that participate in Hilton’s dining network.

It is possible to convert miles from Amtrak Guest Rewards, Hawaiian Airlines and Virgin Atlantic into Hilton Honors points at varying ratios, though this is typically not a great option since the transfer ratios are quite low.

A much better deal – if you have an American Express card that earns transferable Membership Rewards points, such as the Platinum Card or the American Express Gold Card, you can initiate transfers at a ratio of 1,000 Amex points to 2,000 Hilton points.

On the flip side, members can convert Hilton points into airline miles with over 40 partners including American Airlines, Delta, United, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, and Singapore Airlines. The conversion ratio for most of these partners is 10,000 Hilton points to 1,000-1,500 airline miles. So this should only be a last resort, as should redeeming points for a car rental with Alamo, Enterprise, or National.

Elite Status Tiers and Benefits

Hilton Honors members who spend a certain number of nights at Hilton properties each year can earn elite status, which confers benefits such as bonus points-earning opportunities, room upgrades, free breakfast, and more.

The program currently has three tiers of elite status starting with Silver, which is earned after four stays or 10 nights per calendar year, or earning 25,000 base points (equivalent to spending $2,500 at hotels). If you hit this level, you will earn 20% bonus points on stays (so 12 points per dollar instead of the regular 10), and receive a few perks like free bottles of water and a fifth night free on award stays.

If you earn Gold status by completing 20 stays or 40 nights in a calendar year, or by earning 75,000 base points (i.e. spending $7,500 at hotels), you get 80% bonus points (so 18 per dollar on stays), the possibility of room upgrades, and complimentary breakfast at most hotels.

Top-tier Diamond status is achieved at 30 stays or 60 nights, or by earning 120,000 base points in a calendar year (equivalent to spending $12,000 on hotel stays). Diamond elites get a 100% point bonus on stays (so 20 points per dollar), free premium internet, a better chance of room upgrades, club lounge access at some hotels, and various welcome amenities.

One interesting facet to the Hilton Honors program is that elite members can roll over any nights above the status level they achieve for the following year. So if you spend 20 nights in Hilton hotels this year, you would qualify for Silver status, which only requires 10 nights. The extra 10 nights will be rolled over into your qualification activity for the following year, giving you a jump on earning status yet again.

Remember, though, that all of Hilton’s American Express credit cards come with automatic elite status of one level or another, so carrying one of them is the fastest and cheapest shortcut to becoming a Hilton Honors elite and enjoying all the attendant perks.

Pros and Cons of Hilton Honors

The advantages of enrolling in Hilton Honors include the opportunity to earn and redeem points at thousands of hotels all over the world. The program’s co-branded credit cards offer some incredible benefits, including great ways to earn bonus points, automatic elite status, and on-property credits for things like dining and spa treatments during stays. One final factor in its favor: the ability for members to pool their points with up to 10 other people for free, putting more award nights within easy reach.

Unfortunately, the program lacks transparency when it comes to award nights since rates at a single hotel can vary by tens of thousands of points depending on demand. Also a drag? Hilton’s airline and shopping partnerships offer poor redemption values for your points.

How to Sign Up

It only takes a moment to sign up for Hilton Honors, and it’s free, so you might as well.

You Can Now Earn Hilton Honors Points Every Time You Ride Lyft

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Starting Tuesday, May 14, Hilton Honors and Lyft are teaming up to give their customers a chance to earn more rewards points than ever before.

How exactly can you start earning points? First, link your Hilton Honors and Lyft accounts on HiltonHonorsLyft.com. As soon as you finish a ride, you’ll get double the points for every dollar spent on shared Lyfts, and three times the points for every dollar spent on economy, luxury, and extra seats.

The partnership gives Hilton Honors members an opportunity to rack up points — and the resulting rewards — even faster.

Related: Hilton Is Launching the Hotel Brand of Business Travelers' Dreams

Lyft has a similar partnership with Delta Air Lines that allows people to earn one mile per dollar on rides within the U.S., and two miles for any cars booked from the airport.

“Our vision is for Lyft to be the most convenient and rewarding travel option for our riders and having a top tier hospitality partner, in addition to our current airline partnerships, brings us one step closer,” said David Baga, Lyft’s chief business officer. “We are always seeking to provide the best rider experience and often look to leading category partners to help deliver a great hospitality experience.”

Hilton Honors member benefits range from late checkout to free hotel nights to special offers (like tickets to the Grammy's).

The timing of the new partnership couldn’t be better with summer right around the corner, so here's your reminder to get traveling.