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Hyatt opening hotels in Santorini and Sardinia in 2022

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Hyatt is pushing ahead with its European expansion with the announcement of two very interesting openings for 2022.

First up is Magma Resort Santorini, due to open in mid-2022. An image is below.

This will be part of The Unbound Collection by Hyatt, Hyatt’s version of Marriott’s Autograph or Hilton’s Curio Collection. These brands allow hotels to join a chain without adhering to any strict brand standards as long as they are high quality.

Magma Resort Santorini Hyatt

Magma Resort Santorini “will offer one-of-a-kind luxury stays. The 59-room resort will be nestled among traditional old vineyards and located on the lava-made slopes of Vourvoulos where guests will be able to enjoy stunning Santorini sunsets.”

It is already on the Hyatt website here although not bookable.

Second up is 7Pines Resort Sardinia, part of the Destination by Hyatt brand. This is expected to open in mid 2022. It is not a surprise to see this resort join Hyatt after the original 7Pines Resort in Ibiza signed last year.

To quote:

“7Pines Resort Sardinia will mark the second Destination by Hyatt hotel in Europe. Ideally located overlooking the archipelago of La Maddalena and surrounded by untouched coastline and a nature reserve, guests will enjoy laid-back luxury and a deep sense of place in this unique setting.”

Hyatt’s presence in Madrid will be boosted by Thompson Madrid, also expected in mid 2022. This marks the reintroduction of the Thompson brand to Europe – it gave up its London hotel in Knightsbridge after a couple of, presumably unsuccessful, years.

To quote:

“The dynamic, thoughtfully curated hotel will be located in the center of the new Golden Mile of Madrid, steps away from the most visited icons of the city. Striking design and spaces, including a rooftop terrace and pool, are sure to make the hotel a cultural hub showcasing the individuality of the locale.”

Santorini and Sardinia are likely to be exceptionally good value for World of Hyatt redemptions. World of Hyatt has ‘last room availability’ which means that if a standard room is bookable for cash, it must be made available for points. With Hyatt’s award chart capping out at 35,000 points, it should be easy to exceed our 1.1p per Hyatt point valuation in Summer.

Hyatt has also excellent value suite and suite upgrade awards, which I took advantage of on my recent trip to Paris.

The problem, of course, is that there is no easy route to earn Hyatt points in the UK without ‘heads in beds’. There is no credit card and no credit card transfer partners.

Doing a Membership Rewards transfer deal with American Express would be a big win for both sides in my view. The lack of partners puts people off doing occasional Hyatt stays as there is no way of topping up the points earned.

PS. Looking further ahead, Hyatt has signed two luxury resorts on Lanzarote – Alila Lanzarote and Grand Hyatt Lanzarote – which will open in 2025.


World of Hyatt update – April 2025:

Get bonus points: 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 (58)

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

  • WillPS says:

    Could the card be using open banking protocols – e.g. every time you spend on your card it does a Faster Payment from your nominated bank account to top up?

    I reckon it’ll end up being more like Clubcard Pay+ than Curve either way.

  • Frank says:

    Oh, whens apple card coming out?

  • memesweeper says:

    ‘Doing a Membership Rewards transfer deal with American Express would be a big win for both sides in my view. The lack of partners puts people off doing occasional Hyatt stays as there is no way of topping up the points earned.’

    absolutely this… I put my (few) Hyatt stays through Hotels.com as I can’t earn enough in the Hyatt scheme.

  • Jonathan says:

    The main point that curve has is that it can tell the merchant that the card being presented is a debit card, but the money is coming from a credit card (non-Amex though), there’s nothing at all to suggest here that if Virgin Money were to launch something like what’s mentioned above that it would have this feature

    • Bob says:

      How does Curve show this? I assumed that Curve looked the same to the merchant regardless of the card that sits behind it, and what is forwarded is the MCC?

  • pauldb says:

    Doesn’t look like the 7Pines Sardinia would have any view of La Maddalena. Instead it looks south across a small bay at a boat yard and apartment complex.

  • Char Char says:

    If they link up their points scheme and brand with the new idea then maybe it will work but the Curve product on its own is useless and most people use it for HMRC and paying Amex or just for the free credit.

    It will be exposed eventually when it runs out of routes for funding and then probably brought out by the existing owners to do something else with it.

  • Colin JE says:

    I can’t imagine there being much in it for Virgin to compete with Curve. Not sure if anyone has stumbled across it yet but there is a competitor in the wings getting ready to launch in the form of Vitracash. Looks like it could be a great alternative to Curve but details are a bit sketchy.

  • Dave P says:

    Take away Curve fronted and you have a very sub standard product. The customer service has fallen off a cliff, the Creation and NS&I fiasco and how they handled it was appauling.
    In essence calling us out for breaching their terms and demanding an excess of personal information. No comms for weeks, then a ‘oh its ok you didn’t do anything wrong ‘ email.

    If any offered the abilty to Pay HMRC with a credit card, curve dies.

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

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