Marriott STARS and Luminous: the advisor-only booking channels that add breakfast, credits and upgrade priority to Bonvoy-earning stays
Marriott STARS and Luminous are preferred-partner booking programmes, available exclusively through authorised travel advisors, that layer enhanced benefits onto paid stays at Marriott’s luxury and premium brands. They are not public rate categories and cannot be accessed on marriott.com. The rate you pay is the standard flexible rate — the same as booking directly — but the reservation carries a defined benefit package applied by the advisor at the time of booking. Your Bonvoy number attaches as normal, points and elite qualifying nights earn as they would on any direct stay, and your elite status recognition continues on top.
The two programmes cover different tiers of the Marriott portfolio. STARS applies to the top luxury brands, where all properties participate and the benefit set is fully consistent. Luminous covers premium and lifestyle brands, but with an important caveat: individual hotels within Luminous brands can opt out of the programme, and even participating hotels can choose not to offer the $100 property credit. That opt-out flexibility makes Luminous meaningfully less predictable than STARS, and always worth verifying with your advisor before a booking decision.
STARS vs Luminous: which brands, and what the difference means
The brand split between STARS and Luminous is clearly defined. STARS covers Marriott’s top-tier luxury portfolio — Ritz-Carlton, Ritz-Carlton Reserve, St. Regis, The Luxury Collection, EDITION Hotels and Bvlgari Hotels & Resorts. Every property within these brands participates, and the benefit package is identical across all of them. Luminous covers the premium tier — W Hotels, JW Marriott, Autograph Collection, Westin, Le Méridien, Renaissance, Marriott Hotels, Tribute Portfolio, Sheraton, Delta Hotels and Gaylord Hotels. Participation is property-level and voluntary.
| STARS | Luminous | |
|---|---|---|
| Brands | Ritz-Carlton, Ritz-Carlton Reserve, St. Regis, The Luxury Collection, EDITION, Bvlgari | W Hotels, JW Marriott, Autograph Collection, Westin, Le Méridien, Renaissance, Marriott Hotels, Tribute Portfolio, Sheraton, Delta Hotels, Gaylord Hotels |
| Participation | Mandatory — all properties participate | Optional — individual hotels can opt out entirely |
| Daily breakfast for two | ✓ Consistent at all properties | ✓ At participating properties |
| $100 property credit | ✓ Guaranteed at all STARS properties | At select properties only — not guaranteed |
| Room upgrade | Space-available at check-in | Space-available at check-in |
| Early check-in / late checkout | Subject to availability | Subject to availability |
| Welcome amenity / Wi-Fi | ✓ Both included | ✓ Both included at participating properties |
Unlike STARS, where every property in every participating brand is enrolled, Luminous hotels can individually opt out of the programme. A hotel being a Westin or JW Marriott does not mean it participates in Luminous. Additionally, even hotels that do participate can choose not to offer the $100 property credit. Before planning a stay around Luminous benefits — particularly the credit — ask your advisor to confirm exactly which benefits apply at your specific property.
Where STARS adds value that status alone cannot
For travellers with Bonvoy elite status, STARS can fill two significant gaps that no tier of loyalty status covers.
The first is breakfast at Ritz-Carlton and EDITION properties. Bonvoy elite benefits do not include complimentary breakfast at these two brands regardless of tier — not even at Titanium or Ambassador level. Breakfast is one of the most consistent and reliable value elements of a STARS booking, and at properties where the restaurant breakfast runs £40–£80+ per person, it is also one of the easiest to quantify. A STARS booking converts what would otherwise be a daily out-of-pocket cost into a guaranteed inclusion.
The second is Bvlgari Hotels & Resorts. Bvlgari does not participate in Marriott Bonvoy at all — no points earn, no elite recognition, no status benefits. It is, however, part of the STARS programme. For travellers staying at a Bvlgari property, STARS is the only channel that provides any structured benefit framework. Without it, a Bvlgari stay is simply a cash booking with no programme recognition of any kind.
The most compelling STARS use cases are properties where loyalty status produces nothing or produces an inferior breakfast outcome. At a Bvlgari, STARS is the only structure available. At a Ritz-Carlton or EDITION, STARS delivers breakfast that status — at any tier — does not. For Bonvoy Platinum, Titanium or Ambassador members staying at these brands, STARS is additive in the most literal sense: it provides benefits that the loyalty programme explicitly does not cover.
How the rate and booking mechanics work
Both STARS and Luminous bookings must be made through an authorised advisor at the public flexible rate. This is Marriott’s standard, fully cancellable rate — not the member discount rate, not a prepaid rate, not a corporate rate, and not any promotional rate. The advisor makes the reservation directly with Marriott, the booking appears in your Bonvoy account in the normal way, and points and elite qualifying nights post as they would on any qualifying stay.
The flexible rate is typically more expensive than member or advance-purchase rates, sometimes meaningfully so. That rate premium is the access cost for the STARS or Luminous benefit package. Whether the package covers the gap is the core calculation: for a two-night stay at a Ritz-Carlton with a $100 credit and two daily restaurant breakfasts at £50+ per person, the arithmetic is usually favourable. For a one-night stay at a lower-rate Autograph Collection where the credit is not on offer, the calculus is much tighter.
Pull three numbers: the flexible rate (= the STARS/Luminous rate), the member rate, and any prepaid rate. Multiply the gap by your stay length — that is the cost of accessing the benefit package. Then value the breakfast (typically $40–$80+ per person per day at STARS-tier properties) and the credit ($100 at STARS, confirmed; variable at Luminous). If the benefit value materially exceeds the rate gap, proceed. Also ask your advisor whether any special offers — third/fourth/fifth night free promotions — are available, as these sometimes make the STARS rate the cheapest option overall.
Upgrades: what STARS and Luminous do and do not guarantee
Upgrades through both programmes are space-available at check-in — they are not confirmed at the time of booking. The reservation is flagged to the hotel’s management team in advance, which is said to improve upgrade priority relative to a standard direct booking, but the outcome remains dependent on occupancy on the night. There is no equivalent to Hyatt Privé’s upgrade-confirmed-within-24-hours mechanism. Travellers for whom a specific room category is a priority should not rely on STARS or Luminous to deliver it — they should book the room type they want and treat the upgrade as a potential upside, not a planned outcome.
Stacking with Bonvoy status
Because bookings are made directly with Marriott through the advisor, full Bonvoy status recognition applies alongside programme benefits. For Platinum, Titanium and Ambassador members, this creates a genuine stacking effect. The better of the two benefits applies where they overlap — so a Titanium member whose status already delivers breakfast at a JW Marriott would gain primarily from the $100 credit (if the property offers it) and the upgrade prioritisation. The full STARS value is greatest at properties where status provides limited or no breakfast recognition, which is precisely the Ritz-Carlton, EDITION and Bvlgari use cases.
STARS and Luminous vs Amex FHR and Virtuoso at the same property
For properties that appear across multiple programmes, the channel comparison is worth running. Amex FHR guarantees 4pm late checkout — STARS and Luminous do not (availability-based only). FHR breakfast is guaranteed at a minimum daily value ($60+ per room); STARS breakfast is included but the format (full or continental) is property-designated. Where the late checkout guarantee matters — particularly for business travellers or late-departure days — FHR has a structural edge.
Against Virtuoso, STARS has a more flexible $100 credit: Virtuoso credits are often restricted to food and beverage only, while STARS credits typically apply to any eligible on-property spend including spa. STARS also covers considerably more Marriott properties than Virtuoso’s curated network includes. For Ritz-Carltons not enrolled in Virtuoso, STARS may be the only advisor-programme option available.
Marriott Bonvoy’s dynamic pricing means redemption value varies significantly by property and date. At high-rack-rate properties — a St. Regis or Luxury Collection flagship at peak season — the cash rate is often steep enough that the STARS benefit package, while valuable, does not close the gap between flexible and member rates as cleanly as a points redemption might. Before committing to a STARS cash booking, check the points cost for the same dates. If the redemption delivers 0.7p+ per point of value against what you would otherwise pay at the member rate, that route may be more efficient — though you would lose the STARS benefits on a points stay.
Where STARS and Luminous work best
STARS delivers its clearest value at Ritz-Carlton, EDITION and Bvlgari properties where breakfast is not covered by status and the $100 credit is guaranteed. Multi-night stays at destination properties and resort locations where both breakfast and credit will be fully used are the optimal use case. Luminous is most valuable at JW Marriott, W Hotels and high-tier Autograph Collection properties where you have confirmed in advance that both breakfast and the credit are on offer at your specific hotel.
Both programmes are less compelling for short stays, properties where status already covers breakfast, or cases where the member or advance-purchase rate is substantially cheaper than the flexible rate and the benefit gap does not close it.
Use STARS for EDITION, Ritz-Carlton and Bvlgari stays — these are the properties where status delivers no breakfast and Bvlgari no Bonvoy recognition at all. STARS fills both gaps cleanly. Luminous is less predictable: hotels can opt out and the $100 credit is not guaranteed, so always verify before booking. Upgrades in both programmes are availability-based at check-in, not confirmed in advance. Run the flexible-vs-member rate gap before every booking.