Miles for Adventures

I finally did it – Titanium is mine!

After missing the mark by just a few nights last year, I was finally able to pass Platinum with Marriott and achieve Titanium status, good from now until the end of 2026. This is the first year I’ve ever achieved this status level, so I’ll have to see how it is!

How I got here

To start, Marriott’s credit cards give elite night credits every year just for holding the card. You get the elite nights for one business card and one personal card. For personal cards, the Marriott Bonvoy Bevy and Boundless cards give 15 ENCs, Bonvoy Bold gives 5 ENCs, and the Brilliant card gives 25ENCs. The AmEx Business Card gives 15 ENCs. So cardholders earn anywhere between 20-40 ENCs for having one personal and one business card. I hold the Bonvoy Bevy and Business Cards, which gives 30 ENCs.

Marriott had a Q1-Q2 2025 limited-time offer where every paid night awarded 1 extra elite night and 1000 bonus points. I ended up staying 22 paid nights in the first few months of 2025, which doubled to 44 elite nights. I also stayed one night prior to the promotion, which brings me to a total of 75 ENCs.

Titanium benefits

Marriott Titanium offers a slew of benefits, which really fits in with my overall strategy well. Here is the full list of benefits:

Unfortunately, upgrades are exceedingly rare and the bonus points aren’t quite as useful as you may think. In addition, most benefits (e.g., lounge access, complimentary wifi, and 4pm checkout) are all available with the lower Platinum tier as well.

But the most valuable benefits to me are the instant status matches to Aeroplan 25K and United Silver. Because I live in DEN, which is a United hub, I find value in having that status available – even if I mostly fly with American. Having this status available enables me to shift focus away from having to requalify for United status every year and instead be a free agent on my trips and get United status for free. I don’t see a need to get Gold status, and I don’t need to force any extra PQPs.

Titanium status also enables a second Choice Benefit, which I’ll explain in more detail below.

Choice Benefits

When you achieve certain threshold ENCs, Marriott offers you a few Choice Benefits, where you select from things like additional ENCs, suite upgrade awards, a discount on a mattress purchase, or donations to charities. There are plenty of articles that highlight which choice is best for you.

At the 50 ENC level, you get one choice from a few different options. I opted for the 5 suite upgrade awards, which provides for an upgrade to the selected room type up to 5 days before arrival. Most report better luck using these awards outside of the US – my experience is the same as my upgrade in Singapore was approved right at the 5-day mark.

In addition to the 50 ENC benefit, Titanium members get to choose an additional 75 ENC benefit. Just for having 75 ENCs, I was able to get a free night certificate worth up to 40k points – good for most mid-tier hotels priced around $200-$400.

Will I try again next year?

Next year is so many months away, so it’s a little hard to say. However, I’ll highlight be low the benefits most useful to me:

For the most part, I don’t necessarily have a reason to stop. But the moment I stop finding the United/Air Canada status benefit useful, I probably would drop back down to Platinum. That being said, if another generous bonus ENC offer comes around, the pot might just be too sweet to pass up 🙂

But in the meantime, I’m focusing my energy on Hyatt Globalist this year. Specifically – I’m enrolled in the corporate challenge to get Globalist after 20 nights within 90 days. And I’m already well on my way to earn that.

#storytime