Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Hyatt launches free wi-fi for all, Starwood does it with a catch

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

I recently wrote about how Marriott will be offering free internet to members of Marriott Rewards who book direct from January 15thHyatt and Starwood, owner of the Sheraton, W, Westin, St Regis, Luxury Collection and aloft brands, have both decided that they likes this idea and are following suit.

To some extent they had no choice.  IHG, owner of Holiday Inn, InterContinental, Crowne Plaza etc, now offers free internet to all guests.  The only condition is that they are members of IHG Rewards Club which is hardly a condition at all given that you can join for free at the hotel reception.

The Marriott offering is more restrictive as it forces you to book directly via the hotel or a Marriott website.  If you use Expedia etc then you will need to pay to get online.

Let’s look at Hyatt first.

This is REAL free wi-fi.  No catches.  No restrictions.  No need to join Hyatt Gold Passport.  No need to have booked via hyatt.com.

From February, whenever you stay in a Hyatt anywhere in the world, ‘base level’ wi-fi will be free.  You will, however, need to pay in some hotels to receive ‘fast’ wi-fi, suitable for video and streaming.  The faster service will be free for Platinum and Diamond members of Gold Passport.

This is a great result for Hyatt guests.  You can read more about Hyatt’s free wi-fi service on their website here.

Starwood is making it more difficult.

Base level Starwood Preferred Guest members will have to choose between booking on Expedia, hotels.com etc and receiving (with hotels.com) Welcome Rewards points, or booking direct and receiving free wi-fi and Starwood Preferred Guest points.

Full details of the Starwood announcement can be found here.  Note that you must book online to get free internet – ringing the hotel directly and making a booking does not count, amazingly.  Neither does ringing SPG.  Booking ‘through a travel professional’ does count but it is not clear what that covers.

Confusingly, each tier of the Starwood programme has a different set of rules:

Preferred (base) level – free standard internet if you book via spg.com

Gold level – free standard internet with no conditions if you select it as your welcome gift, free high-speed internet if you book via spg.com

Platinum level – free high-speed internet with no conditions

To be honest, I think that Marriott and SPG are being too clever here.  There are a huge number of people who only book their hotels via Expedia, hotels.com or a similar site.  These sites will be telling the potential customer that they must pay for internet at Marriott and Starwood.  Internet is a ‘must have’ for most people today, even more so than free breakfast.  At almost every price point, Expedia will have an equally good hotel which does offer free internet to everyone – and it is those hotels who will win the business.

Hyatt ‘gets it’.  Expedia and the other consolidators will now show that a Hyatt property offers free internet, and it will drive business.  You only need to look at the Starwood table above to see that this is far too complex to work properly.

There is no way that I would book a hotel which did not offer free internet.  It is not up for discussion.  Because I know my way around the various loyalty schemes I can always ensure that it happens, but if I didn’t I can assure you that my stay pattern would look a lot different – and it would involve a lot fewer Hilton, Marriott and SPG properties.

Next up is Hilton – what are they going to do?  Restricting free internet to Gold and Diamond members no longer looks sustainable now that Hyatt, Starwood and Marriott have blinked.


Hotel offers update – April 2024:

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from the major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Want to buy hotel points?

  • Hilton Honors is offering a 100% bonus when you buy points by 14th May 2024. Click here.

Comments (18)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Craig says:

    What about Accor, what’s their WiFi policy?

  • Frenske says:

    A big omg and lol, imho how can these hotel chains survive in these modern times where even a lowly B&B gives WiFi as standard. Using WiFi as a benefit is ridiculous, is it something for the rich only? When booking hotels, I pro-actively look for hotels that give you free WiFi. I don’t want to go through the hassle of finding out how to do it and paying for a basic utility. These dinosaurs might be losing customers.

  • Britbronco22 says:

    You should give credit to Club Carlson for leading the way

  • Koshka says:

    We just spent the weekend in Hamburg where both the Ibis and Meridien had free base level wi-fi. Meridien only just introduced this and I was wondering whether it was customer driven as lots of recent Tripadvisor reviews had criticised them about this. The free wi-fi in both hotels was good enough to watch Netflix which kept the whole family happy. I think Accor has it as standard now as we also had free wi-fi in the York Novotel over the summer.

    • Rob says:

      If this is the Meridien overlooking the Alster with the top floor restaurant then it was not free when we were there in August.

  • xcalx says:

    I think this is a ploy by the hotel chains to protect their Best Rate guarantee policies. Many claims will be rejected on the basis the rooms no longer match as the comparison site rate eg. Expedia does not include free wifi.

  • James says:

    You only have to look at tripadvisor for any Hilton property to see scores of complaints about the lack of free wifi.. It simply is not sustainable in today’s market to keep charging people for it.

  • Think Square says:

    Hilton appear to be quietly introducing free wi-fi. I suspect they will announce once it is fully rolled out. I’ve done a lot of Hilton stays recently, but it’s a couple of months since I last had to enter my details to get online.

    • Alan says:

      If they do roll it out I hope they offer decent higher speed connections for Gold and Diamond – since IHG went free for all the speeds have been absolutely atrocious, bordering on unusable at some of the properties I’ve stayed at. Making it free for all without a free premium offering would significantly devalue elite status.

  • Mark says:

    Have to say I was very surprised when I stayed in the Hilton Manchester Airport on a corporate booking with silver status a couple of weeks ago to find that I would have had to pay a ridiculous amount for Wi-Fi. I didn’t on principle (even though work would have paid) and as you say it would make me consider other options in future. The Thistle which I had stayed at for the two previous nights had great Wi-Fi included.

    Leisure bookings on hotels.com always have me ticking the inclusive Wi-Fi box. I’d only ever book one without inclusive Wi-Fi if I was getting sufficiently better value for money on the rest of the package that it is worth paying the fee, and that assumes I can even find out how much the fee is to work out what difference it makes (if I can be bothered).

    The incremental costs on providing at least a basic (slow) service are generally so small this can only be going in one direction…..

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.