Hilton Grand Vacations has grown into one of the most wide-reaching vacation ownership brands in the world, with a portfolio that now includes traditional Hilton Grand Vacations Club resorts, Hilton Vacation Club properties and boutique "Hilton Club" urban retreats. Whether you are already an owner or considering a presentation offer in exchange for a discounted trip, it helps to understand exactly where you can stay, how the locations differ and what types of trips each region is best suited for.

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Aerial view of an oceanfront Hilton-style vacation resort with pools and beach.

Understanding Where Hilton Grand Vacations Fits Into the Hilton Universe

Hilton Grand Vacations is the vacation ownership arm associated with the wider Hilton family of brands. While regular Hilton hotels operate on a nightly booking model, Hilton Grand Vacations focuses on residential-style resorts, typically offering studios through multi-bedroom suites with kitchens or kitchenettes, living areas and resort-style amenities. As of 2026, Hilton Grand Vacations and its affiliated brands span more than 200 properties worldwide when you include Hilton Grand Vacations Club, Hilton Vacation Club and the legacy Diamond Resorts and Bluegreen portfolios now under the HGV umbrella.

For members, the core experience revolves around a points-based system. Owners purchase an annual allotment of points, which they then redeem for stays at Hilton Grand Vacations resorts in the U.S. and abroad. In many cases, those points can also be converted for stays at regular Hilton hotels through Hilton Honors or exchanged into partner networks to reach additional destinations. Non-owners can often book select resorts as regular hotel stays using cash or Hilton Honors points, especially in popular leisure markets like Orlando, Las Vegas and Hawaii.

From the traveler’s perspective, what matters most is the breadth of places you can realistically use your vacation time. Hilton Grand Vacations has a particularly strong footprint in the United States sun-and-fun belt, including Florida, Nevada, South Carolina and Hawaii, along with a growing presence in Mexico, the Caribbean and Europe. The acquisition of Diamond Resorts expanded coverage into additional ski, golf and beach destinations in North America and beyond, now marketed largely as Hilton Vacation Club properties.

Because the system is anchored in real real-estate, availability varies by season and resort. A two-bedroom oceanfront week in Hawaii in January is far more competitive than a shoulder-season city break in September. Understanding the regional strengths of the Hilton Grand Vacations portfolio helps you map your points, expectations and future travel plans more realistically.

Orlando and Florida: Theme Parks, Beaches and Family Getaways

Florida is the single richest region for Hilton Grand Vacations stays, especially around Orlando’s theme parks. Flagship properties include SeaWorld Orlando, a Hilton Grand Vacations Club, Tuscany Village, Parc Soleil and Las Palmeras, all clustered within a short drive of Walt Disney World and Universal Orlando. These resorts are built for families: expect one- and two-bedroom condos with full kitchens, washer-dryers in many units, multiple pools, children’s splash areas, game rooms and on-site dining. Many guests use them as a base for full-day theme park outings, then retreat to quieter pools and spacious suites in the evening.

Former Diamond Resorts properties in the same area, such as Mystic Dunes, Grand Beach and Cypress Pointe, have been rebranded under the Hilton Vacation Club name. These tend to feature large landscaped grounds, golf courses, lazy rivers and a more traditional timeshare atmosphere. For example, a family of five planning a week-long Disney trip might choose a three-bedroom villa at Mystic Dunes, giving everyone separate sleeping areas, while still paying a nightly cost that is often comparable to or lower than two standard hotel rooms in a similar location.

Beyond Orlando, Hilton Grand Vacations’ Florida presence stretches to the coasts. On the Atlantic side, The Cove on Ormond Beach and Daytona Beach Regency offer condo-style units steps from the sand, while Ocean Oak Resort on Hilton Head Island and Ocean 22 by Hilton Grand Vacations in Myrtle Beach, just north in South Carolina, capture that same Atlantic coast feel. On the Gulf side, Marco Island and Sanibel Island feature classic Florida beach escapes with smaller, quieter resorts where owners often return the same week every year, building long-standing traditions around shelling, fishing and sunsets over the gulf.

Because Florida is such a core market for Hilton Grand Vacations, it is one of the easiest regions to book with points, especially if you are flexible on exact dates and resort choice. For those who prefer to pay cash, rates can vary from budget-friendly weeknight stays under typical resort prices during off-peak periods, to premium holiday pricing around Christmas, Easter and peak summer. Knowing which Orlando or coastal resort suits your travel style helps you navigate the dense Florida portfolio.

Las Vegas and the American Southwest: Entertainment, Golf and Desert Landscapes

Las Vegas is another powerhouse destination for Hilton Grand Vacations stays. Elara, a Hilton Grand Vacations Club, sits directly off the Strip with a private entrance into the Miracle Mile Shops. Its high-rise suites feature floor-to-ceiling windows, many with sweeping views of the Strip and, in some layouts, projection screens that turn the living room into a cinema. Just a short monorail ride away, the Flamingo and other Hilton Grand Vacations properties cluster near major casinos, offering a quieter place to sleep while keeping you close to shows, dining and nightlife.

Because Las Vegas is so dense with hotel inventory, Hilton Grand Vacations resorts there often deliver good value in terms of space per dollar or space per point. A one-bedroom suite with a full kitchen at Elara can make sense for couples or small groups who want to stretch a long weekend into a mini apartment-style stay, cooking a few meals to offset restaurant spending. Owners often find that midweek dates outside major conventions or sporting events require fewer points, freeing up their annual allotment for more expensive destinations like Hawaii or Europe.

Beyond Las Vegas itself, the Hilton Grand Vacations portfolio covers a swath of the American Southwest. In Arizona, Scottsdale Links Resort and Scottsdale Villa Mirage provide a base for desert golf trips and Cactus League baseball in spring. Sedona-based properties managed under the Hilton Vacation Club brand, such as Sedona Summit, position travelers near the region’s famous red rock hiking trails and scenic drives. These resorts typically offer outdoor pools, hot tubs, barbecues and activity programs such as guided hikes or wine-tasting outings in nearby Verde Valley.

For many owners, the Southwest destinations function as easy, drivable getaways compared with fly-to markets like Hawaii. Residents of Southern California, Nevada and Arizona might book long weekends in Scottsdale with relatively few points, saving the bulk of their annual allotment for a once-a-year big trip. That flexibility is a core draw of the Hilton Grand Vacations model in this region.

Hawaii and the Pacific: Classic Island Timeshares with a Hilton Twist

Hawaii is one of the marquee regions for Hilton Grand Vacations, and also one of the most competitive in terms of demand. On Oahu, Hilton Grand Vacations properties cluster around Waikiki and the Hilton Hawaiian Village area, where high-rise towers offer studios and multi-bedroom suites with balconies and partial ocean views. These are popular with both owners and regular Hilton guests who book through the hotel side, so they can feel more like bustling resort-hotels than secluded timeshare enclaves.

On the Big Island of Hawaii, the Bay Club at Waikoloa Beach Resort and nearby Kohala Suites are classic examples of low-rise, villa-style timeshare resorts. Guests spread out in one- and two-bedroom condos with full kitchens, and many have access to resort amenities such as golf discounts, shared pools and shuttle service within the Waikoloa Beach Resort complex. These resorts make sense for travelers who plan to explore both the volcanic landscapes of the island and the calmer beaches of the Kohala Coast, all while having the option to cook breakfast on their own lanai.

Maui and Kauai are represented through a mix of Hilton Grand Vacations and Hilton Vacation Club properties, including oceanfront resorts where units can be just steps from the sand. Given recent wildfires and recovery efforts in parts of Maui, availability and specific offerings can evolve, so prospective travelers should always confirm current resort status before finalizing plans. In general, Hawaiian resorts in the system emphasize outdoor pools, grills, cultural activities like lei-making or ukulele lessons, and convenient access to snorkeling, whale watching and island tours.

Because Hawaii commands such strong demand, owners often plan trips here far in advance, sometimes using banking and borrowing features to combine multiple years of points for a single high-value stay. Non-owners paying cash can expect pricing that reflects the broader Hawaiian hotel market: nightly rates that may be significantly higher than comparable-sized units in Florida, but with the benefit of a full resort setting and the familiarity of the Hilton brand.

Europe, Mexico and the Caribbean: International Options for Longer Journeys

Outside North America, Hilton Grand Vacations has been steadily building a network of international resorts. In Europe, standout examples include Craigendarroch Suites in Ballater, Scotland, which positions travelers at the doorstep of the Scottish Highlands, and Vilamoura in Portugal’s Algarve region, where guests stay near championship golf courses and Atlantic beaches. These resorts offer a more boutique, countryside feel than large American complexes, with amenities like indoor pools, saunas and compact but well-equipped apartments suited to week-long stays.

In Italy and Spain, Hilton Grand Vacations members often reach coastal destinations through a combination of direct HGV resorts and partner exchanges. For instance, it is common for owners to convert Hilton Grand Vacations points into Hilton Honors points, then book standard Hilton hotels in cities such as Rome, Florence, Barcelona or Madrid. A couple might pair a one-week stay at Vilamoura in Portugal with additional nights at city-center Hiltons along a multi-stop European itinerary, all under the broader Hilton umbrella.

Mexico and the Caribbean add warm-weather variety, particularly for U.S. owners on the East Coast and in the Midwest. In Mexico, Hilton Vacation Club properties and partner resorts in areas such as Nuevo Vallarta, Acapulco and the Riviera Maya give members access to all-inclusive style beach escapes or self-catering suites in resort communities. In the Caribbean, Barbados and other island locations appear in the broader HGV portfolio, often accessed through exchange partnerships, allowing owners to trade a week in Orlando, for example, for a comparable unit at a Barbados beachfront resort during spring.

These international stays typically require more advance planning and careful attention to airfare, transfer times and seasonal weather. For many owners, the sweet spot is combining a home-resort stay in North America every year or two with a larger, point-intensive international journey every few years. That rhythm helps balance aspirational travel dreams with the practicalities of school schedules and work vacation time.

Urban “Hilton Club” Properties and City Breaks

Not all Hilton Grand Vacations stays are about beaches and pools. The company also operates a handful of urban “Hilton Club” properties designed for city breaks. In New York City, for example, The Hilton Club New York and The Central at 5th, a Hilton Club, offer apartment-style units within walking distance of major Midtown landmarks, theaters and shopping. These properties typically feel more like traditional hotels but with upgraded room configurations, including studios with kitchenette areas and one-bedroom suites.

Similar urban club properties exist in cities such as Washington, D.C. and Charleston, offering a base for long weekend explorations of museums, historic districts and food scenes. Owners who prioritize these locations often value the ability to secure central, high-demand city stays using vacation ownership points rather than paying cash rates that can spike during peak tourism or event periods.

City-based stays require a slightly different mindset than beach or ski vacations. While resort destinations encourage lingering on property and making full use of pools, fitness centers and activity programs, urban club properties are typically about access and convenience. Guests might spend most of the day exploring neighborhoods, then return to their suite to cook a simple dinner or enjoy a late-night snack before bed. For frequent city travelers, especially those who enjoy theater seasons, sporting events or annual festivals, these club properties can be a compelling use of points.

It is worth noting that availability in these smaller urban properties can be tight during popular periods such as December in New York or cherry blossom season in Washington, D.C. Owners who cherish city breaks often choose a home resort in these locations to gain priority booking windows, ensuring they can secure the dates they want each year.

How Membership and Exchange Expand Where You Can Stay

While the core Hilton Grand Vacations resort map already covers a wide range of destinations, membership perks expand the practical list of places you can stay. Many owners can convert their annual HGV points into Hilton Honors points at a fixed ratio, then redeem those points for regular Hilton hotel stays worldwide. This means your vacation ownership can effectively fund nights at Hilton hotels in cities where HGV does not own dedicated timeshare resorts, such as London, Paris, Tokyo or Sydney.

In addition, Hilton Grand Vacations maintains relationships with vacation exchange companies that give owners access to thousands of affiliated resorts worldwide. By depositing a week or a block of points into an exchange network, an owner might swap a shoulder-season stay in Las Vegas for a ski week in Canada, a countryside cottage in England or a beach resort in Costa Rica, depending on what is available. These exchanges come with additional fees and require flexibility, but they significantly widen the map for adventurous travelers.

There are also newer options such as HGV Max, which provide enhanced access across the legacy Hilton Grand Vacations and Diamond portfolios, along with discounted “HGV Max” rates at participating Hilton hotels. Eligible owners may find they can use their membership as a hybrid tool: reserving full weeks at timeshare resorts in some years, and short hotel-style stays near work trips or family events in others, all while earning Hilton Honors points on many of those bookings.

For non-owners, the practical takeaway is that you do not necessarily need to buy into the system to experience these resorts. Many Hilton Grand Vacations and Hilton Vacation Club properties can be booked directly with cash or Hilton Honors points, especially outside peak holiday periods. Trying a stay at Parc Soleil in Orlando, Elara in Las Vegas or Ocean 22 in Myrtle Beach on a regular reservation can be a low-commitment way to see whether the Hilton Grand Vacations style of travel suits you before listening to a sales pitch or considering ownership.

The Takeaway

Hilton Grand Vacations offers a broad canvas of places to stay, anchored in resort-style properties across Florida, Las Vegas, Hawaii and the American Southwest, with meaningful additions in Europe, Mexico, the Caribbean and a few key urban centers. For many travelers, the appeal lies in having a familiar standard of accommodation and amenities, whether that is a two-bedroom villa near Orlando’s theme parks or a compact city suite steps from a New York theater district.

Owners who understand the strengths of each region, plan ahead for high-demand locations like Hawaii and major holidays, and use points strategically across both resorts and standard Hilton hotels tend to get the most from the system. Meanwhile, casual guests can still tap into this network by booking select resorts as regular hotel stays, enjoying condo-style space and resort features without the long-term commitment.

Ultimately, where you can stay with Hilton Grand Vacations depends on how flexible you are and how creatively you use the network. Whether your ideal trip is a week of roller coasters in Orlando, a golf-and-spa break in Portugal, a Strip-view suite in Las Vegas or a multi-stop European city adventure built on converted points, Hilton Grand Vacations provides a framework to turn recurring travel dreams into recurring stays.

FAQ

Q1. Do I have to be an owner to stay at a Hilton Grand Vacations resort?
In many cases, no. A significant number of Hilton Grand Vacations and Hilton Vacation Club resorts can be booked like regular hotels using cash or Hilton Honors points, especially in major leisure destinations such as Orlando, Las Vegas and Hawaii. However, certain room types, weeks or club properties may be reserved primarily for owners, so availability can differ from standard Hilton hotels.

Q2. What are the most popular Hilton Grand Vacations destinations in the United States?
Orlando and greater central Florida, Las Vegas, Hawaii and South Carolina’s coastal areas rank among the most popular American destinations. Resorts such as SeaWorld Orlando, Parc Soleil, Elara on the Las Vegas Strip, Ocean 22 in Myrtle Beach and the Waikoloa-area properties on Hawaii’s Big Island consistently attract strong demand from both owners and nightly guests.

Q3. Can I use Hilton Grand Vacations points to stay at regular Hilton hotels?
Many owners can convert their Hilton Grand Vacations points into Hilton Honors points at a set ratio, then redeem those points for stays at Hilton-branded hotels worldwide. This allows you to use vacation ownership value in cities where no dedicated HGV resorts exist, such as London, Paris or Tokyo. Conversion ratios, fees and annual limits vary by membership type, so it is important to review your specific program rules.

Q4. How far in advance should I book high-demand resorts like Hawaii?
For in-demand locations such as Hawaii, prime winter weeks in Florida or holiday periods in New York, booking as early as your membership window allows is wise. Many owners plan Hawaiian or peak-season trips a year or more in advance, sometimes combining multiple years of points to secure larger units or oceanfront views. Flexibility with travel dates can improve your chances of finding availability.

Q5. What is the difference between Hilton Grand Vacations Club and Hilton Vacation Club?
Hilton Grand Vacations Club refers to the original HGV-branded resorts, while Hilton Vacation Club typically designates properties that joined the portfolio through acquisitions, such as legacy Diamond Resorts. Both types offer condo-style accommodations and participate in HGV’s broader network, but the exact booking rules, point values and amenities can differ slightly between brands and specific resorts.

Q6. Are Hilton Grand Vacations resorts suitable for large families or groups?
Yes. One of the key advantages of Hilton Grand Vacations resorts is the availability of multi-bedroom units with full kitchens, dining areas and living rooms. Properties in Orlando, Myrtle Beach, Las Vegas and Hawaii often offer two- and three-bedroom configurations, making them well-suited for larger families, multi-generational trips or groups of friends traveling together.

Q7. Can I trade my Hilton Grand Vacations week or points for stays at non-Hilton resorts?
Many HGV memberships include access to external exchange companies that connect to thousands of affiliated resorts worldwide. By depositing a week or points, you may be able to book stays at non-Hilton properties, including ski resorts, countryside retreats or international beach destinations. Exchange options usually involve additional fees and depend on availability and relative trading power.

Q8. What amenities can I typically expect at Hilton Grand Vacations resorts?
Most resorts in the portfolio feature outdoor pools, hot tubs, fitness centers and children’s play areas, along with activities such as pool games, crafts or local excursions. Many also include on-site bars, casual restaurants or grab-and-go markets. In-room, you can usually expect a kitchen or kitchenette, laundry access and separate living and sleeping areas compared with standard hotel rooms.

Q9. Are Hilton Grand Vacations stays a good option for remote work or longer stays?
For travelers who work remotely or prefer extended vacations, Hilton Grand Vacations resorts can be attractive because of their residential features. Having a separate bedroom, living area and kitchen makes it easier to balance work calls with leisure time, and many properties offer strong Wi-Fi and quiet weekday atmospheres outside school holidays. Some owners specifically plan multi-week stays in shoulder seasons to take advantage of this flexibility.

Q10. How can I try a Hilton Grand Vacations resort before considering ownership?
You can book select HGV and Hilton Vacation Club resorts directly with cash or Hilton Honors points as a regular hotel guest. Another common path is accepting a promotional package that bundles a discounted multi-night stay with a sales presentation. If you choose a promotion, review the terms carefully, budget extra time for the presentation and treat the stay as your opportunity to honestly evaluate whether the locations, room types and overall travel style match how you like to vacation.