Hilton is one of the largest hotel companies on the planet. With 8,397 properties and 1,251,068 rooms across 22 brands operating in 126 countries and territories, a Hilton vendor listing is not just a single customer win — it is access to a procurement ecosystem that spans economy to ultra-luxury, from Spark by Hilton to Waldorf Astoria.

But getting approved is not simple. Hilton operates a structured vendor evaluation process, maintains strict brand standards that vary by tier, and has escalating sustainability requirements under its Travel with Purpose program. Suppliers who understand this system before they apply save months of wasted effort and dramatically increase their approval odds.

For the broader context of how hotel procurement works across all chains — budget cycles, approval hierarchies, and RFP timelines — start with our guide to the hotel procurement buyer journey. This guide breaks down how Hilton’s procurement system works, what standards you need to meet by brand tier, and the specific steps mid-market suppliers should take to position themselves for approval.

Understanding Hilton’s Procurement Structure

Scale and Scope

Hilton’s system is massive and growing. In 2024, the company partnered with Small Luxury Hotels of the World (SLH), adding approximately 450 independent luxury properties to its distribution network. Hilton’s Spark brand, launched in 2023 as a premium economy conversion brand, surpassed 100 hotels globally by 2024. The company continues to expand aggressively across every segment.

MetricFigure
Total Properties8,397
Total Rooms1,251,068
Number of Brands22
Countries and Territories126
SLH Partnership Properties~450
Spark by Hilton Properties100+ (as of 2024)

How Procurement Decisions Flow

Hilton’s procurement operates on two levels:

Corporate Procurement (Global and Regional): Sets approved vendor lists, negotiates master supply agreements, defines brand standards for all product categories, and manages the SupplierConnection platform. This team evaluates and approves new vendors.

Property-Level Procurement: Individual hotel General Managers, Directors of Operations, and department heads select products from the approved vendor list. They can request items not on the list, but this requires an exception process that most properties avoid.

The practical implication: your first sale is to Hilton corporate, not to an individual hotel. Getting listed on the approved vendor program is the prerequisite for selling to any Hilton property. Property-level relationships help build demand that supports your corporate application, but they cannot substitute for it.

SupplierConnection: Hilton’s Vendor Platform

Hilton uses SupplierConnection as its primary platform for vendor management and procurement. This is where approved vendors are listed, where properties browse and order products, and where new supplier applications are processed.

What SupplierConnection Requires

Company Profile:

Product Information:

Compliance Documentation:

Application Tips

  1. Complete every field. Incomplete applications are the most common reason for delays. Hilton’s procurement team reviews hundreds of applications; incomplete ones go to the bottom of the queue.
  2. Lead with your hospitality experience. If you have supplied other hotel brands, name them. If you have worked with Hilton properties informally, document it.
  3. Include reference accounts. Provide 3-5 hotel references with contact names and property details. References from comparable chain-scale properties carry the most weight.

Brand Standards by Tier: What Hilton Expects

Hilton’s 22 brands span from economy to ultra-luxury. The product specifications, quality requirements, and price points vary dramatically across tiers. Suppliers must understand which tiers their products align with.

Hilton Brand Tier Map

TierBrandsRoom Count RangeTarget MarketProduct Standards
LuxuryWaldorf Astoria, Conrad, LXR Hotels & Resorts, SLH (partner)100-500 roomsAffluent travelers, special occasionsHighest quality, custom specifications, premium materials, signature amenities
Upper UpscaleSignia by Hilton, Hilton Hotels & Resorts200-1,000+ roomsBusiness and upscale leisureHigh quality, brand-specific standards, full-service requirements
LifestyleCanopy by Hilton, Tempo by Hilton, Tapestry Collection, Curio Collection, Graduate Hotels, Motto by Hilton100-300 roomsDesign-conscious, experience-orientedDesign-forward, locally inspired, flexible standards with creative latitude
UpscaleDoubleTree by Hilton, Embassy Suites, Hilton Garden Inn150-400 roomsBusiness travelers, familiesConsistent quality, value-oriented, functional design
Upper MidscaleHampton by Hilton, Homewood Suites, Home2 Suites80-200 roomsValue-conscious business and leisureCost-efficient, durable, standardized specifications
Economy/ConversionSpark by Hilton, Tru by Hilton80-130 roomsBudget travelersMaximum durability, minimal customization, strict cost targets

What This Means for Suppliers

A linen supplier offering 300-thread-count sheets is targeting Hampton and Spark properties. A supplier offering 600-thread-count Egyptian cotton with custom monogramming is targeting Waldorf Astoria and Conrad.

Trying to sell a luxury product into the Hampton tier wastes both your time and the procurement team’s. Conversely, offering an economy product for Waldorf Astoria signals that you do not understand Hilton’s brand architecture.

The strategic sweet spot for mid-market suppliers: Focus on the Upscale and Upper Midscale tiers (DoubleTree, Embassy Suites, Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton, Homewood Suites, Home2 Suites). These brands represent the largest volume of Hilton’s portfolio, with the most properties and the most frequent procurement cycles. Quality requirements are rigorous but not bespoke, and order volumes are large enough to be commercially significant.

Stop chasing hotels manually. InnLead.ai’s 12 AI agents scan renovation signals, identify procurement contacts, and book meetings with hotel buyers — automatically. Get Early Access

Travel with Purpose: Hilton’s Sustainability Requirements

Hilton’s Travel with Purpose program is not optional for vendors. It is an increasingly central element of procurement evaluation, and suppliers who cannot demonstrate sustainability credentials face a growing disadvantage.

Hilton’s 2030 Sustainability Targets

Target AreaGoalBaseline
Carbon Emissions (Scope 1 & 2, managed hotels)75% reduction in intensity2008 baseline
Carbon Emissions (Scope 3, franchised hotels)56% reduction in intensity2008 baseline
Waste to Landfill50% reduction2008 baseline
Water Consumption50% reduction in intensity2008 baseline
Soap RecyclingExpanded program (partnership with Clean the World)Ongoing
Single-Use PlasticsSystematic reduction across all brandsOngoing

What This Means for Vendor Evaluation

Hilton evaluates suppliers on their ability to support these targets. Specific criteria include:

Packaging: Vendors are expected to minimize packaging waste, use recyclable materials, and eliminate single-use plastics where feasible. If your product ships in excessive packaging, expect questions.

Product Lifecycle: Hilton increasingly asks about product durability, recyclability at end-of-life, and take-back programs. A towel supplier that offers a worn-towel recycling program scores higher than one that does not.

Supply Chain Transparency: Where are your raw materials sourced? What are the working conditions in your factories? Hilton’s responsible sourcing expectations align with broader industry trends — 73% of tourists prefer hotels with sustainable practices, and sustainability certifications grew 20% between 2022 and 2023.

Certifications That Strengthen Your Application:

Documentation to prepare: A sustainability policy statement, environmental certifications, carbon footprint data for your products (if available), and specific examples of how your products reduce waste, energy, or water consumption at hotel properties.

The Vendor Evaluation Timeline

Understanding the typical timeline prevents suppliers from expecting a quick win. Hilton’s evaluation process is thorough and involves multiple stakeholders.

PhaseDurationWhat Happens
Application SubmissionDay 0Complete profile submitted via SupplierConnection or direct contact with category procurement manager
Initial Review2-4 weeksProcurement team reviews application completeness, basic qualification criteria
Category Assessment4-8 weeksCategory-specific procurement manager evaluates product fit, pricing, and competitive positioning
Sample Evaluation4-6 weeksPhysical samples submitted and tested against brand standards at relevant tier
Reference Checks2-4 weeksHilton contacts provided references, may also check industry references independently
Sustainability Review2-4 weeksTravel with Purpose team evaluates environmental and social responsibility credentials
Commercial Negotiation4-8 weeksPricing, payment terms, distribution logistics, contract terms
Pilot Program (if applicable)8-16 weeksTrial at 2-5 properties to evaluate real-world performance
Approved Vendor Listing2-4 weeksFinal approval and listing on SupplierConnection

Total timeline from application to approved listing: 6-12 months. Complex product categories (FF&E, technology) may take longer. Commodity categories (consumables, amenities) with established specifications may be faster.

Accelerating the Process

Factors that speed up evaluation:

  1. Existing Hilton property relationships. If individual Hilton hotels are already purchasing your product informally, document this. It demonstrates product-market fit and reduces Hilton’s perceived risk.
  2. Competitor brand listings. If you are an approved vendor for Marriott, IHG, or Hyatt, say so. Cross-brand approval signals that you have passed rigorous evaluation before. Our Marriott supplier requirements decoded guide covers that chain’s parallel process.
  3. Complete documentation from day one. Every missing certificate, every incomplete form, every delayed sample adds weeks to the process.
  4. Proactive sustainability positioning. Do not wait for Hilton to ask about your sustainability practices. Include your environmental credentials prominently in the initial application.

Strategies for Mid-Market Suppliers

You do not need to be a billion-dollar company to become a Hilton approved vendor. But you do need to compete strategically.

1. Target the Right Brand Tiers

As noted above, the upper midscale and upscale tiers (Hampton, Homewood, Home2, Hilton Garden Inn, DoubleTree, Embassy Suites) represent the volume core of Hilton’s portfolio. These properties need reliable, cost-effective products at scale. Mid-market suppliers with strong operational execution can compete effectively here.

2. Lead with Regional Strength

If you cannot serve all 126 countries, do not pretend you can. Position yourself as a strong regional supplier for specific markets. A linen supplier with excellent distribution across the U.S. Southeast is more useful to Hilton than a global supplier with inconsistent service levels.

3. Offer a Differentiator Beyond Price

Hilton does not automatically choose the cheapest vendor. Differentiation can come from:

4. Build Property-Level Demand First

Before applying to corporate, develop relationships with 5-10 Hilton property-level contacts. Supply them through existing approved vendor channels if possible, or provide samples and demonstrations. When property managers mention your product positively to their regional procurement contacts, it creates pull-through demand that strengthens your corporate application.

5. Attend Hilton’s Supplier Events

Hilton hosts supplier diversity events and procurement networking sessions. These are rare opportunities to meet category managers face-to-face. Monitor announcements through SupplierConnection and Hilton’s corporate responsibility reports.

6. Invest in the Right Certifications

If you are missing a certification that Hilton requires for your category, obtain it before applying. Submitting an application with a note saying “certification in progress” is weaker than submitting with the certification in hand.

Understanding the Competitive Landscape

Hilton’s approved vendor lists are not unlimited. For most product categories, Hilton maintains 3-8 approved vendors. This means you are competing for a limited number of slots against established incumbents.

Research your competitors. Identify who currently supplies Hilton in your category. You can gather this intelligence from:

Your value proposition must answer one question: Why should Hilton add or switch to you instead of maintaining their current vendor lineup? The answer must include at least one of: better product performance, lower total cost of ownership, stronger sustainability credentials, or superior service levels. For the specific criteria and weights that procurement teams use to compare suppliers, see our guide on how hotels evaluate suppliers using a scoring matrix.

Beyond Approval: Maintaining and Growing the Relationship

Getting approved is the beginning, not the end. Hilton continuously evaluates vendor performance.

Performance metrics typically tracked:

Growth strategies post-approval:

  1. Expand across tiers. If approved for Hampton, pursue approval for Hilton Garden Inn and DoubleTree.
  2. Expand across categories. If approved for bath towels, pursue approval for bed linens or pool towels.
  3. Expand geographically. If approved for North America, pursue approval for European or Asia-Pacific properties.
  4. Participate in new-build and renovation projects. The global hotel pipeline reached 15,820 projects with 2.4 million rooms in Q4 2024. Hilton’s share of that pipeline represents hundreds of new properties needing complete OS&E outfitting.

The ROI of a Hilton Listing

The math is straightforward. Hilton operates 8,397 properties with over 1.2 million rooms. Even capturing 1% of properties in your category means 84 hotels as potential customers. At an average OS&E spend of $1,500-3,000 per room per year for a mid-market category, a single Hilton listing can represent a $5-25 million annual revenue opportunity depending on your product and category breadth.

But the indirect value may be even larger. “Hilton Approved Vendor” on your sales materials opens doors at every other hotel chain, independent property, and management company. It signals that you have passed one of the industry’s most rigorous evaluation processes.

The investment in meeting Hilton’s standards — the certifications, the sustainability documentation, the sample development, the 6-12 month evaluation process — is not a cost. It is the entry fee to the largest recurring revenue opportunity in the hotel supply industry. For a broader comparison of how Hilton’s requirements stack up against Marriott, IHG, and Accor, see our hotel brand standards compliance guide. And once you are on the approved list, our guide to winning hotel procurement RFPs will help you convert that listing into contracts. If you need help finding Hilton properties entering procurement cycles, explore InnLead.ai’s services.

More On This Topic

Use these related guides to keep moving through the same procurement, sales, or market research thread.

Procurement Hotel Brand Standards: Supplier Compliance Guide Navigate hotel brand standards for Marriott, Hilton, IHG, and Accor. Covers compliance requirements, testing, and approved vendor list timelines. Procurement Marriott Supplier Requirements Decoded (2026) Detailed breakdown of Marriott's supplier qualification process, Avendra GPO procurement, Serve 360 mandates, and insider tips for vendor approval. Getting Started How to Become a Hotel Supplier: 2026 Guide Every major hotel chain vendor portal, GPO application, and insider tips in one guide. Step-by-step process to become an approved hotel supplier in 2026. Procurement Hotel Procurement: The Buyer's Journey Explained Deep dive into hotel procurement: budget cycles, approval hierarchies, GPOs, RFP timelines, and what it takes to get on a hotel chain's approved vendor list.

Skip the Manual Work

InnLead.ai's 12 AI agents find hotels buying your products, identify procurement contacts, and book meetings -- automatically.

Get Early Access