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‘World of Hyatt’ to replace Gold Passport in 2017 – what is changing?

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With the anticipated demise of Starwood Preferred Guest following the merger with Marriott, Hyatt Gold Passport was looking even more attractive for travellers who were prepared to work around their limited number of properties in return for outsize benefits.

Unfortunately, Hyatt has decided that now is the time to relaunch their loyalty scheme.  From 1st March 2017, Hyatt Gold Passport will become World of Hyatt.

As you can see, they did not bother paying a design firm to knock up a classy logo:

world-of-hyatt-thumbnail

The fundamentals of the programme have not changed:

You will still earn 5 base points per $

You can still redeem at the same rates as today

The main changes relate to how you earn status within the programme.

The two current elite levels, Platinum and Diamond, are being replaced by three elite tiers:

Discoverist (10 nights or 25000 base points)

Explorist (30 nights or 50000 base points)

Globalist (60 nights or 100000 base points)

For those who achieve the highest tier, Globalist, the benefits are improved as suites are now included in the rooms available for possible upgrades.  The other elite benefits (premium internet, suite upgrade vouchers confirmable at time of booking, late check-out, guaranteed club access etc) remain.

I will not go into the changes in detail because Gold Passport / World of Hyatt is not a major programme for the majority of Head for Points readers.

The key issue is how you reach the new elite tiers.

(A slightly less key issue is why the tiers have such silly names – how are you meant to remember whether Discoverist is better or worse than Explorist or Globalist?)

At present, you can earn elite status with Hyatt based on stays or on nights.  Going forward, it will be based ONLY on nights.

This will make it substantially harder to retain or earn status if you tend to do a lot of one night stays.   Even for US-based travellers, finding yourself in enough Hyatt-friendly cities to manage 60 nights a year will be a stretch.  For travellers outside the US it will be very hard.

At present, for example, the status targets are:

Platinum (5 stays or 15 nights)

Diamond (25 stays or 50 nights)

There will be some people who just manage to qualify for Diamond at present via 25 x 1-night stays who won’t even qualify for the middle tier of Explorist (30 nights) under the new structure.

Look at it another way ….. Marriott requires 75 nights to earn its top tier of Platinum.  However, Marriott has 5700 hotels and that is before you include the Starwood properties which will be added from 2018.  Hyatt will require 60 nights but you will only have 680 properties to choose from.  That isn’t easy.

We will look at World of Hyatt more closely as the 1st March launch date approaches.


World of Hyatt update – April 2024:

Get bonus points: World of Hyatt is not currently running a global promotion

New to World of Hyatt?  Read our overview of World of Hyatt here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on what we think World of Hyatt points are worth is here.

Buy points: If you need additional World of Hyatt points, you can buy them here.

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

Comments (9)

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

  • Steve says:

    Wow, that logo is hideous.

    • Genghis says:

      +1. Even I could knock that up and I’m not one bit creative (at art stuff anyway – MS is a different matter…)

    • Sideysid says:

      Think they accidentally clicked on the ‘justify’ text option on the settings on word….

    • Peter Taysum says:

      Really horrible, the “of” is so out of position…

      Gross

    • xcalx says:

      Have you seen the head for points logo that goes in the google bookmarks bar

      Same colour blue background with a white H

  • Rob al says:

    When I read through the terms, admittedly rather quickly, I couldn’t see anything about points expiring. Do you have any way to clarify that?

  • Talay says:

    As someone who stays longer at properties and feels undervalued due to having many nights and fewer stays, I feel this addresses the value to the business.

    25 x £50 stays with near zero incidental expenditure can hardly be classed as the equivalent to 5 x £250 stays with an additional 50% onsite spending.

  • HAM76 says:

    Regarding remembering the levels… The levels are in ascending alphabetical order: D, E, G.

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

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