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Hilton Worldwide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American multinational hospitality company

Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc.
Hilton Worldwide headquarters inTysons, Virginia
FormerlyHilton Hotels Corporation (1919–2009)
Company typePublic
IndustryHospitality
FoundedMay 31, 1919; 106 years ago (1919-05-31), inCisco, Texas, U.S.
FounderConrad Hilton
Headquarters,
U.S.
Number of locations
Increase 7,530 (2023)
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Products
Brands
RevenueIncreaseUS$11.2 billion (2024)
IncreaseUS$2.22 billion (2024)
IncreaseUS$1.54 billion (2024)
Total assetsIncreaseUS$16.5 billion (2024)
Total equityDecreaseUS$−3.7 billion (2024)
Number of employees
Increase 178,000 (2023)
Websitehilton.com
Footnotes / references
[1][2][3][4]

Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc. is an Americanmultinationalhospitality company that manages and franchises a broad portfolio of hotels, resorts, and timeshare properties. Founded byConrad Hilton in May 1919, the company is now led byChristopher J. Nassetta. Hilton is headquartered inTysons, Virginia, United States.

As of December 31, 2023, the company's portfolio includes 7,530 properties (including timeshare properties) with 1,182,937 rooms in 118 countries and territories. Hilton owns or leases 51 properties, manages 800 properties, and franchises out the remainder.[5]

History

[edit]

Foundation and early years

[edit]

In 1919,Conrad Hilton purchased his first hotel, the 40-roomMobley Hotel inCisco, Texas, and bought additional Texas hotels as the years passed.[6]

In 1925, theDallas Hilton became the first hotel to use the Hilton name.[6] In 1927, Hilton expanded toWaco, Texas,[7] where he opened the first hotel with air-conditioning in public areas and cold running water.[8][9][10]

In 1943, Hilton assumed management of theRoosevelt Hotel and purchased thePlaza Hotel, both inNew York City'sMidtown Manhattan neighborhood. With this pair of acquisitions, Hilton became the first hospitality company to span the contiguous United States.[11]

The company was incorporated in 1946 as the Hilton Hotels Corporation and subsequently began public trading of shares on theNew York Stock Exchange.[12][13][14] In 1947, the Roosevelt Hotel became the first hotel in the world to havetelevisions in its rooms.[11]

In 1947, Hilton assumed management of the Palacio Hilton hotel inChihuahua, Mexico, which became the chain's first international property. That same year, they assumed management of four hotels on the island of Bermuda.[15]

Hilton International was founded as a wholly owned subsidiary in 1948,[16] just before the 1949 opening of theCaribe Hilton Hotel inPuerto Rico.[17] Barman Ramon "Monchito" Marreno claimed he created thepiña colada cocktail at this resort.[18][14] Hilton purchasedThe Waldorf-Astoria in New York in the same year.[19][20]

Hilton in the 1950s - 1980s

[edit]
The former Hilton Hotels Corporation headquarters inBeverly Hills, California

In 1953, Hilton opened its first hotel in Europe, the Castellana Hilton in Madrid, Spain.[21]

TheHotels Statler Company was acquired in 1954 for $111 million in what was then the world's most expensive real estate transaction.[22]

Hilton is credited with several early innovations. In 1954, Hilton created the world's first central reservations office, titled "HILCRON". The reservations team in 1955 consisted of eight members on staff booking reservations for any of Hilton's then 28 hotels. Reservations agents used the "availability board" to track records. The chalkboard measured 30 feet (9.1 m) by 6 feet (1.8 m) and allowed HILCRON to make over 6,000 reservations in 1955.[23] Bookings could be made for any Hilton via telephone,telegram, orTeletype. Later in 1955, Hilton launched a program to ensure every hotel room would includeair conditioning.[24] Hilton is also credited with pioneering theairport hotel concept with the opening of the Hilton Inn atSan Francisco International Airport in 1959.[25]

International expansion continued in this era. From 1955 to 1963, Hilton opened hotels in Turkey, Central America, Canada, Africa, Oceania, South America, and Asia.[24][26][27][28][29][30]

In 1965, Hilton launched Lady Hilton, the first hotel concept created specifically for women guests.[31] To appeal to female travelers, many properties offered floors occupied by only women along with distinct amenities for their usage.[32][14]

Between 1970 and 1971, Hilton acquired the International Leisure Company, including theInternational Hotel and theFlamingo Hotel, which were renamed the Las Vegas Hilton and the Flamingo Hilton.[33][34][35] The properties would become the first in the domestic gaming business to be listed on the NYSE.[36]

In 1977, Hilton International opened its first property behind the "Iron Curtain" in Communist Europe, the Budapest Hilton.[37]

In 1979, founder Conrad Hilton died at the age of 91.[38] Hilton Hotels Corporation later created the Conrad Hotels brand in honor of Hilton.[39]

Hilton Honors (formerly Hilton HHonors), the company's guest loyalty program, was initiated in 1987.[40] In 1994, the Honors surpassed competing hotelloyalty programs by offering members both hotel credit points andairline credit miles.[41][42]

In 1998, Hilton spun off its gambling operations into a separate, publicly held company calledPark Place Entertainment (later Caesars Entertainment, Inc.)[43] In 1999, Hilton acquiredPromus Hotel Corporation, which included the DoubleTree,Red Lion, Embassy Suites, Hampton Inn, and Homewood Suites brands.[44]

Two chains with one name

[edit]

The company spun off its international operations into a separately traded company on December 1, 1964, known as "Hilton International Co." It was acquired in 1967 byTrans World Corp., the holding company forTrans World Airlines.

As a result, there were two separate, fully independent companies operating hotels under the Hilton name. Because the two chains were contractually forbidden to operate hotels in the other's territory under the Hilton name, for many years hotels run by Hilton International in the U.S. were called Vista International Hotels, while hotels operated by the American arm of Hilton outside the U.S. were named Conrad Hotels. Those Hilton Hotels outside the U.S. were, until 2006, styled as "Hilton International" hotels.[45]

In 1986, Hilton International was sold toUAL Corp., the holding company forUnited Airlines, for $980 million.[46] UAL was reorganized as Allegis Corp. in an attempt to re-incarnate itself as a full-service travel company, encompassingWestin Hotels andHertz rental cars in addition to Hilton International and United Airlines. In 1987, after a corporateputsch, the renamed Allegis sold Hilton International toLadbroke Group plc, a British leisure and gambling company, for $1.07 billion.[47] In May 1999, Ladbrokes was reorganized as "Hilton Group plc."[48]

CEOPeter George, John Jackson andSteve Bollenbach at a Ladbroke-Hilton event.

In 1997, to minimize longtimeconsumer confusion, the American-owned Hilton and British-owned Hilton International companies adopted a joint marketing agreement, under which they shared the same logos, promoted each other's brands, and maintained joint reservation systems. At that point, the Vista chain was phased out, while Conrad was restyled as one of the luxury brands of Hilton, operating hotels within the U.S. and abroad.

21st century

[edit]
Christopher J. Nassetta, Hilton Worldwide President and CEO, in 2004

In 2001, Hilton agreed to sell Red Lion to WestCoast Hospitality.[49]

On December 29, 2005, Hilton Hotels Corporation agreed to re-acquire the Hilton International chain from its British owner, Hilton Group plc, for £3.3 billion ($5.71 billion). As well as bringing the two Hilton companies back together as a single entity, this deal also included Hilton plc properties operating as Conrad Hotels,Scandic Hotels, and LivingWell Health Clubs.[50] On February 23, 2006, the deal closed, making Hilton Hotels the world's fifth-largest hotel operator in number of rooms.[51] Scandic Hotels was sold the next year on March 1 toEQT AB.[52]

On July 3, 2007, Hilton Hotels Corp. agreed to an all-cash buyout from theBlackstone Group LP in a $26 billion (including debt) deal that would make Blackstone the world's largest hotel owner.[53] At $47.50 per share, the buyout price was 32 percent higher than the closing value of a share of Hilton stock on July 3.[54] The deal was the culmination of a year of on and off discussions with Blackstone.[55] In October 2007, Christopher J. Nassetta was appointed president and chief executive officer of Hilton.[56] In February 2009, Hilton Hotels Corp. announced that its headquarters were moving from Beverly Hills, California to Fairfax County, Virginia.[57]

While Blackstone saw an opportunity to streamline the company and push Hilton's expansion overseas when Blackstone pursued Hilton in 2006 and 2007, the buyout saddled the company with $20 billion of debt just before the2008 financial crisis. In April 2010, Hilton and Blackstone restructured the debt with Blackstone invested a further $800 million of equity and the debt was reduced to $16 billion.[58]

Hilton returned to being a public company on December 12, 2013. This second IPO in the company's history raised an estimated $2.35 billion.[59] The Blackstone Group retained a 45.8% stake in the company.[60]

The company announced in February 2016 that Hilton would turn its hotel holdings into areal estate investment trust.[61]

In February 2016, Hilton announced its intention to spin off its timeshare and real estate businesses, creating three independent public companies.[62] The spin-offs ofPark Hotels & Resorts andHilton Grand Vacations were completed in January 2017.[63] As of 2018, the company is a fully independent publicly traded company after the exits of Blackstone and HNA.[64]

On February 7, 2024, Hilton announced an exclusive partnership with Small Luxury Hotels of the World.[65]

On April 3, 2024, Hilton announced its acquisition of a majority controlling interest in Sydell Group, the owner of NoMad Hotels, aiming to expand the luxury lifestyle brand with up to 100 new NoMad hotels globally.[66]

Brands

[edit]
Conrad inTokyo
Doubletree by Hilton inCairns
Hampton by Hilton inBlue Ridge, Georgia
Hilton Grand Vacations inLas Vegas

As of 2025, Hilton Worldwide owns 22 hotel and resort brands in six internal categories:[67]

Luxury

[edit]

Lifestyle

[edit]

Full Service

[edit]

Focused Service

[edit]

All Suites

[edit]

Vacation Ownership

[edit]

Franchising

[edit]

As of February 2024, 6,679 of Hilton's 7,530 hotels and timeshare resorts worldwide are owned and operated by independent franchisees or companies and not by Hilton Worldwide itself, this includesHilton Grand Vacations which was a division of Hilton Worldwide until it was spun off into a separate company to act as a franchisee for Hilton's timeshare brands. Through this franchising model Hilton Worldwide owns the Hilton hotel and resort brands along with theintellectual property associated with them but does not own nor operate the physical hotels and resorts that bear those brand names. In order to utilize the Hilton brands, the independent franchisees and companies must follow strict brand standards to maintain a licensing agreement with Hilton Worldwide.[68] Many of Hilton's flagship properties, airport properties, and largest resorts, however, are corporately managed.[citation needed]

Corporate affairs

[edit]

Head offices

[edit]

The company has its headquarters inTysons, Virginia, and an operations center inMemphis. Its Asia-Pacific operations are managed out ofSingapore, its Middle East and Africa operations are managed out ofDubai, and its European operations are based inWatford, UK.[69]

Loyalty program

[edit]

Hilton Honors (formerly Hilton HHonors) is Hilton's guest loyalty program, through which frequent guests can accumulate points and airline miles by staying within the Hilton portfolio. The program has approximately 195 million members.[70] There are four levels of elite status within the Hilton Honors program including Member, Silver, Gold, and Diamond. Hilton points average a value of 0.58¢ each.[71] Hilton renamed the Hilton HHonors program to Hilton Honors in February 2017.[72]Recent changes announced in September 2025 include significantly increased redemption point costs at luxury and peak-rate Hilton properties (for example, Waldorf Astoria Maldives rising from 190,000 to 250,000 points per night), limited promotional bonuses for elite statuses, and broader concerns among members that benefits are becoming harder to access without high rates of spending.[73]

Sustainability

[edit]

Animal welfare

[edit]

In 2015, Hilton committed to sourcing 100% cage-free eggs by December 31, 2017, and sourcing pork products withoutgestation crates by December 31, 2018.[74]

Controversies

[edit]

Lodging of ICE officers

[edit]
Part ofa series on the
Immigration policy of the
second Trump administration
NYPD Strategic Response Group blocks protesters outside whilepolice escort arrestees from Hilton TriBeCa hotel to jail truck
This section is an excerpt fromHilton Worldwide ICE lodging controversy § Lodging of ICE officers.[edit]

In January 2026, Hilton withdrew franchise status from a Minneapolis franchisee that sought to preventUnited States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from staying in their hotel.[75]

Financial advice expertRamit Sethi organized a boycott of Hilton properties and asked his fans to cancel their reservations.[76] Minnesota residents also protested several times late at night outside Canopy by Hilton and Graduate by Hilton properties where a large number of ICE officers were reportedly staying, playing drums and making noise to protest the officers' presence in their city.[77][78] Similarly, civil rights attorneys organized a campaign to have Hilton Honors members cancel their accounts in protest of Hilton, accusing the company of being complicit in ICE's actions.[79]

After thekilling of Alex Pretti,protesters occupied a Hilton hotel in New York City that protesters believed lodged ICE officers resulting in dozens of arrests.[80][81][82][83][84]

Hilton in popular culture

[edit]

References

[edit]
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