Bilt acquired travel commission platform Sion for $30M. The price tag hints this is about transaction data, not travel concierge services.

What We Know About the Deal
Bilt Rewards announced on March 11 that it has acquired Sion, a commission management platform used by more than 8,000 travel advisors, for $30 million. This is Bilt’s second acquisition in less than a year, following its purchase of receipt data firm Banyan in 2025, and it comes on the heels of a $250 million funding round last July that valued Bilt at $10.75 billion.
Sion was founded in 2019 by Irving Betesh and Alfons Musry. Betesh, who also runs luxury travel agency IBC Private, built Sion out of his own frustration with tracking commissions. The platform “now manages over $7 billion in travel booking revenue”, automates invoice follow-ups with an 85% success rate, and handles commission reconciliation for thousands of advisors. Following the acquisition, Sion will continue to operate independently under its founders.
Bilt CEO Ankur Jain framed the deal as an extension of Bilt’s mission to make its membership more powerful across housing, neighborhoods, and now travel. The press release emphasizes giving travel advisors better tools to run their businesses while positioning Bilt members as a high-value audience.
But there’s a problem. The press release uses a lot of words to say nothing at all. I’ll come back to this shortly, but for now, the statements above reflect what Bilt has said, and nothing more.
Not a Travel Concierge Play
The initial read on this deal might be that Bilt is gearing up to offer some kind of white-glove travel concierge service to its members. After all, the press release talks about connecting members with “world-class travel advisors,” and Bilt has been steadily expanding its rewards ecosystem beyond rent payments. It would make sense on the surface and miles and points influencer (and friend), Ben Komenkul surmised that a travel concierge service is coming.
And maybe it is. Afterall, Chase purchased Frosch (significant corporate travel) in 2022, and Frosch had bought Valerie Wilson travel agency (leisure) in in 2021. Its travel concierge services have been integrated into the Chase Private Client and throughout the Chase Travel business. But in the case of Frosch and its subsidiary, VWT, travel partner contracts came along with it.
But I don’t think that’s what this is really about. Sion is not a travel agency. It doesn’t book trips. It doesn’t curate itineraries. What Sion does, at its core, is track and reconcile the commissions that travel advisors earn from suppliers. I should know, I’m a customer. Scott & Thomas switched to Sion less than two years ago and it’s been a fantastic technology tool inside of an archaic system behind the scenes at virtually every travel provider. It’s a back-office accounting tool for an industry that has historically been terrible at getting paid on time. If Bilt wanted to launch a concierge travel service, there are far more direct ways to do it than buying a commission tracking platform.
It’s About The Transaction Data (Probably)
What Sion does have is something arguably more valuable: visibility into $7 billion worth of travel transactions. That’s detailed booking data across thousands of advisors, covering hotels, airlines, cruise lines, and tour operators. For a company like Bilt that has built its entire business model on turning everyday spending into loyalty currency, that kind of data is gold. And I bristle at the comment, “$7 billion in travel booking revenue” because that’s not close to reality. Of that $7bn, my travel agency has a small portion, but it’s not Sion’s revenue, it’s ours. It’s also only reported to Sion when we report it so it’s not as if Sion even knows it’s transacted unless we tell Sion that’s the case. Earlier this year, Sion introduced a component whereby it will manage the commissions coming in for some vendors, improving payment times for agencies and their advisors. But even that has to be an incredibly small amount of Sion’s business due to the limited number of times we have seen it enacted.
Think about what Bilt did with Banyan. That acquisition gave Bilt access to itemized receipt data, which it uses to power personalized rewards and merchant insights. Sion fits the exact same playbook. With commission data flowing through its system, Bilt can see which travel suppliers are generating the most bookings, what types of trips are trending, and where the money is moving. That intelligence could shape everything from transfer partner negotiations to new earning categories on the Bilt Mastercard.
If Banyan was clearly an intelligence play, why suggest that Sion is anything else. Agencies like mine have no interaction with Sion and it would be similar to saying that Salesforce manages the revenue of its clients. It doesn’t. I can’t see a world where Sion, now through Bilt, reaches out to agencies to perform concierge level services in a broad manner. How would that be handled. Anyone can sign up for the service, how could a new agency guarantee it could provide the level of service Bilt would expect?
“By giving travel advisors the tools to run their entire business more effectively, we’re building a network of the world’s best travel advisors, and our members benefit from that.” – Ankur Jain, Founder and CEO of Bilt
Sion’s tool is an excellent resource for a growing agency, and we are happy customers of the service. But it’s a one-way street to this point and I can’t imagine a world in which it becomes a reciprocal relationship.
The Price Tag Raises Questions
Here’s where it gets interesting. Thirty million dollars is a lot of money for a company like Sion. The platform raised just $3.2 million in seed funding back in 2022. While Sion’s growth has been impressive, it’s a commission reconciliation tool, not a high-margin SaaS juggernaut. Its revenue model is built on fees from advisors and agencies, and even with 8,000 advisors on the platform, it’s hard to imagine the top-line revenue alone justifying a $30 million price tag.
That tells me Bilt wasn’t paying for Sion’s current revenue. Even at a very high multiple, it couldn’t have been based on earnings. It was paying for the data asset and the advisor network that comes with it. In a world where Bilt is valued at nearly $11 billion and is aggressively building out a platform that touches housing, dining, fitness, and now travel, $30 million is a relatively small bet on owning a critical piece of the travel data infrastructure. Whether that bet pays off depends on how well Bilt can actually monetize the data and integrate it into its broader ecosystem.
Conclusion
Bilt’s acquisition of Sion looks like a travel play in the press release, but the real story has to be about data. Sion gives Bilt a window into billions of dollars in travel transactions, and that’s the kind of intelligence that can reshape a loyalty program. The $30 million price tag is steep for what Sion generates on its own (presumably), but Bilt isn’t buying a commission tracker. It’s buying a data pipeline. How Bilt leverages that data in the months ahead will tell us whether this was a savvy move or an expensive experiment.
What do you think?



Perhaps Bilt is planning to build the next generation version of American Express Travel.
Psh. Wish they’d simply invest in a proper customer service team. Some of the horror stories so far are not promising. Feels very ‘you’re on your own’ if anything doesn’t go right. Been watching my charges like a hawk, because I’d like to avoid any disputes/claims.
Sion raised $1.3m in pre-seed in 2020, plus the $3.2m seed you mentioned. So $4.5m. Selling 10% – 15% at seed would be pretty normal. I’m guessing that the seed round implied a post-money valuation of $20m – $30m four years ago. So buying it today at $30m isn’t really that big a premium. And this is certainly going to make Bilt a preferred partner. Regardless, it’s pretty clear that this was a decent return for investors but definitely not a home run. Probably didn’t 2x their money in four years. Somewhere between slightly over seed valuation or 1.5x.
@Gary – You may have information I don’t, and the $3.2MM figure was the one used in the press release but even at $4.5MM their technology and overhead spend is not insignificant. I doubt they are profitable but that’s hardly the reason to buy them at this stage in their life cycle.
My question is with regard to this statement: “And this is certainly going to make Bilt a preferred partner.” To whom? Who is the preferred partner? This acquisition makes Bilt a preferred partner to the vendors (travel providers) with whom they facilitate data and occasionally payments? Maybe I am not imaginative enough, but I can’t foresee the environment in which Bilt becomes a preferred partner to the 8,000 travel advisors they now manage commission data for. And to the traveler and the “member” (cardholder), how does Sion improve their experience? This is a mostly invisible space where travelers don’t see or understand the plumbing of the industry (nor should they, it’s hideous.)
Sion gets travel advisors paid, quickly, which is a huge pain point otherwise. It’s really good piping in a small part of the travel ecosystem, they built a better mousetrap but they weren’t ever going to eat the world so to speak. I don’t think this is a game-changer for Bilt but they’re probably more valuable to Bilt than as a standalone.