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Review: back at the luxurious Park Hyatt New York hotel

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This is my review of the Park Hyatt New York hotel. I was previously here in May 2022 and was happy to return. It is probably the classiest New York hotel run by any of the big chains.

I stayed here using ‘purchased points’, saving 55% on the cash rate, and this is a trick that anyone can use even if they don’t previously have any Hyatt points.

Regular readers will know that I am a fan of Park Hyatt and consider it the best hotel chain owned by a multi-group brand. This means that I would place its hotels above St Regis, Waldorf Astoria, Conrad and The Ritz Carlton.

Park Hyatt New York

Park Hyatt New York is based in one of the new ‘super skinny’ skyscrapers overlooking Central Park on West 57th Street.

Before you get too excited about the views from the tower above, note that only the bottom third is the hotel. There are 210 rooms in total. This building was the first of the ‘super skinny’ towers near Central Park and, frankly, the ugliest.

The hotel website is here.

I stayed here on points that I bought

This is not a cheap hotel. It was $1,495 per night for a standard room on the nights I was there. That said, it was $1,995 when I was there last May so the trend is downwards.

I used 90,000 World of Hyatt points for the stay which I bought during various promotions for an average of around 1.4p.

It meant I paid £630 per night vs £1,400 ($1,495 + tax) if I’d paid cash. This is a saving of 55% although, of course, it is still quite a lot of actual cash.

For a little more perspective, for the coming Wednesday night the three available 3-star Moxy hotels in Manhattan – Chelsea is sold out – are between $750 and $800 per night (£615 to £660) including taxes, for a standard room of around 20 square metres. This is what I paid for the Park Hyatt where rooms are 2.5-3x the size and far better equipped.

You can book for fewer points than I used. The three price bands are 35,000, 40,000 and 45,000 points per night. It was unfortunate that I was there on a peak night and paid 45,000.

You won’t get a Globalist suite upgrade here

I was gifted Hyatt Globalist status for the year which lets me comment on elite treatment here.

One of the key benefits of Hyatt Globalist is that you receive a ‘standard’ suite if one is available at check-in. You don’t get one here, at least on a reward night. Reward stays are only upgraded to a King City View room, which is a base room but on a higher floor. Last year I was given a sheet which confirmed this in writing, although I didn’t this time.

The other key Globalist benefits are given:

  • 4pm late check-out (very important if you have a late flight back to the UK, which was a key reason I stayed here)
  • free breakfast, via room service or in the restaurant, for up to four people in a room (one cooked item, one juice drink, one hot drink)
  • free bottled water and premium internet

I would also have received free parking if I’d been crazy enough to drive. Globalist members don’t pay resort fees on redemptions, but this hotel does not charge them to anyone.

It’s a bed factory, albeit a bed factory for the rich

The biggest difference between ‘historic’ hotels and modern ones is usually the lack of public space in the latter. Public space costs money – because it doesn’t make money – so building multiple lounges etc doesn’t happen.

This area:

Park Hyatt New York lobby

….. is the full extent of the public space at Park Hyatt New York.

Even the bar and restaurant is small. I doubt it seats more than 50 people, hence the ability to have your elite member free breakfast via room service.

If you like to spend your time seeing and being seen, don’t stay here. You’ll have a lot more joy at The St Regis or, when it reopens, the Waldorf Astoria.

The rooms at Park Hyatt New York are big

The rooms at Park Hyatt New York are bigger than many New York apartments, with standard rooms coming in at between 500 and 620 square feet according to the website.

Not only are they large, they are beautifully designed. Park Hyatt hotels generally have oversized bathrooms and Park Hyatt New York does not disappoint.

However …. this room wasn’t as cool as the one I had last year.

In turns out that, due to the narrow width of the building:

  • rooms facing north – as I had last year – are at the larger end of the 500-620 square foot range and have the bedroom and bathroom side by side, so there are windows running the full length of the room and bathroom, ie:
Park Hyatt New York bedroom

and, also from my 2022 stay:

Park Hyatt New York bath
  • rooms facing south, as I had this year, are at the smaller end of the 500-620 square foot range and are of a ‘standard’ layout, ie the bathroom is at the back and has no windows, eg
Park Hyatt New York bedroom

There is no difference – at all – in terms of facilities between the two layouts, but the north facing ones are far more pleasant due to the extra square footage, a second window in the bedroom and the window in the bathroom. You also get a tiny Central Park view from the higher floor north facing rooms, and get more light because you are overlooking shorter buildings.

Let’s have a look at some of the key features.

The bathrooms are particular impressive. Everything you want is here – two sinks, lots of toiletries (you even get bath salts and a loofah!) and a box containing all the bits you might have forgotten such as a toothbrush and toothpaste. Toiletries are by Le Labo and come in small bottles.

Park Hyatt New York bathroom

and

Park Hyatt New York bathroom

It’s the little things that stand out at this hotel. Electrically powered curtains and shades, a B&O speaker system, a huge desk with all the sockets you need, an impressive mini-bar, Nespresso machine with ample capsules and milk, fast wi-fi etc. Everything just works. Whatever you need, it will be here.

It’s hard to describe how much money has been spent on this hotel. Everything – every piece of flooring, every piece of art, every cabinet – feels expensive and classy.

This chest contains the safe, laundry bags etc for example:

Park Hyatt New York chest

Despite what you might expect, the hotel wasn’t exclusively filled with bankers and their clients. There were a lot of families with young children too.

The stunning pool at Park Hyatt New York

If the hotel has one stand-out feature, it is the swimming pool, jacuzzi and sauna on the 25th floor. It is on the wrong side of the building to see Central Park, but it is still a great experience spending time here.

Here is a picture from last year when I literally had it all to myself:

Park Hyatt New York swimming pool

Here is a 2023 shot taken from the jacuzzi which shows the height of the space – it is hugely impressive:

Park Hyatt New York jacuzzi

There is also a spa, gym and hairdressers on the 25th floor which I didn’t investigate.

Breakfast

Breakfast is served in The Living Room, which is basically an all-day eatery. It starts at 7am.

It’s an impressively decorated space but small – the bar is also part of this area – which is probably why the hotel encourages you to have your breakfast via room service.

Park Hyatt New York breakfast

If you’re not getting free breakfast, you may prefer to give it a miss. Not only is it expensive, but from 8am it starts to fill with groups of business people holding breakfast meetings who don’t appear to be hotel guests.

I took what I was allowed to order for free under the Globalist benefits – one hot item (eggs royale on both days), a coffee and an orange juice. The bill – which was wiped from my final invoice – came to $74 including 18% service and taxes. If you were a family of four without Globalist status you definitely wouldn’t have got change from $250. The staff are great, of course, and – like the rest of the hotel – it is all very civilised.

Conclusion

Park Hyatt New York is a supremely classy hotel which oozes wealth from every pore.

That said, it is – still – a bed factory. If it wasn’t for the pool, jacuzzi and sauna (there is also a gym and a spa), there would be virtually nothing to do in the hotel.

Would I stay here again? Absolutely, if I can buy Hyatt points and save over 50% on the list price.

To be honest, when I arrived in my room and found it wasn’t as large or bright as the one I had last May, I was disappointed. Once I’d settled in and remembered how classy and impressive everything is, I felt better – although I’d try to insist on a north facing room next time with more windows.

It’s worth noting that Hyatt’s Thompson Central Park New York hotel – reviewed here – is virtually opposite the Park Hyatt and requires far fewer points. I stayed there again over Easter with my family because of the location. This hotel also plays games with Globalist benefits, however, because the higher floors are treated as a ‘hotel within a hotel’ and not available for upgrades.

The World of Hyatt loyalty scheme has two great benefits. Unlike Marriott, Hilton and IHG, it guarantees that you can book a reward night as long as standard rooms are bookable for cash. World of Hyatt has also retained an award chart so there is always a cap on the points cost even when cash rates go crazy.

The last offer for buying World of Hyatt points is outlined here but ended on 10th October. A new one will almost certainly be along soon.

The Park Hyatt New York website is here.

Looking for a hotel in New York?

We’ve reviewed a number of hotels in the Big Apple over the years. You can see our Manhattan hotel reviews here:

Elsewhere, we’ve reviewed:


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 (47)

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

  • Coleslaw says:

    Choosing to handle upgrades for Globalists on points vs paying cash rates sounds very much against the Hyatt program terms. I don’t think this is one of the properties that is specifically excluded from the upgrade benefit either.

    I’d drop Hyatt corporate a note on this one (although, ironically, Hyatt corporate are the ones who manage this property).

    • Rob says:

      Exactly.

      • Coleslaw says:

        Would you raise it with whoever gave you the Globalisr status for the year? I really hate when properties choose to ignore the rules like this.

        Some brands (like Ziva and Zilara) are known for doing this all the time but you’d expect (a lot) more at a Park Hyatt. Most PHs (Chicago, DC, Buenos Aires, Paris, Vienna, Tokyo, Kyoto, Jakarta, Bangkok, etc) do actually follow the rules and are a LOT more reasonably priced vs NY.

  • T says:

    “I took what I was allowed to order for free under the Globalist benefits – one hot item (eggs royale on both days), a coffee and an orange juice. The bill came to $74 including 18% service and taxes.” Sorry so did you take other items too, or is $74 the new free in New York?

    Great review, Thank you

    • Matt says:

      Some hotels print out a bill for your free breakfast for you to sign, presumably for internal accounting purposes. I suspect this may have been the case here.

      • Rob says:

        Correct.

        • Maxwell says:

          This is also very much driven by US tip culture. The expectation is that you tip 20% on the value of your meal even if it was free.

          • Jimmy says:

            How do you tip in these situations? Sign the check and leave cash?

            Side note: i’d love a HfP guide to tipping etiquette – a couple of times I’ve been unsure if I have to tip when receiving ‘free’ services with premium travel- e.g. airport lounge drinks, or F dining. Hard to know what the standard is!

          • Rob says:

            An 18% service charge is added to PH NY bills so there is no requirement to tip more unless you are a) generous (and you’d be very generous to want to tip more than 18% on a $65 bill given the low level of interaction needed to order some eggs) or b) too dim to realise 18% was added. Regardless, the Globalist T&C specifically state that your breakfast increases gratuities.

        • Thegasman says:

          In the US they still bring you a check for “free” stuff as there’s an expectation (borderline obligation!) for you to leave a 20% + tip on the full value.

      • T says:

        That makes sense, Thank you for your clarification. The small matter of 75 big G’s for eggs, juice, and coffee? Yikes!

  • Mike Hunt says:

    $74 for eggs, coffee and juice !!!! You can get a full English with coffee, juice and croissants for £40 at the Savoy

    • Erico1875 says:

      The price of being rich.
      Gouged at every opportunity and then pretending its worth it.
      Id rather stand in a Q , knee deep in s€£t waiting to get my eyes poked with a fork than pay $74 for a couple of eggs

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Rather? Sounds like they do it anyway. $74 for some eggs 😂😂😂

        • JDB says:

          What’s amazing is that the US and even New York were such a bargain in the 1980’s and that remained the case for quite a long time. It was partly a function of a much stronger £, but everything was still fundamentally cheaper, customer service was so much better than Europe and they weren’t expecting 20%+ tips. One could eat at top cutting edge restaurants for peanuts and top hotels were quite reasonable. The city was also in the process of a massive clean up and became very safe. In 2023, extreme prices and tawdriness are combined making it a very unattractive proposition.

          • TGLoyalty says:

            I certainly won’t be back in a hurry. It’s just not that good.

          • PhatGit says:

            And don’t forget the stink of dope everywhere and sellers on every street corner trying to get kids to buy, just now it is legal.
            Have done something like 100 nights in NY in the last 12 years, won’t be rushing back anytime soon

          • Doug M says:

            It’s still NYC, c’mon people. It remains one of the great cities of the world. It’s got very expensive, and the service has declined as the expected tip increases, but you can eat for less in delis. I agree with @davefl (I think) the continual bitching about the US is very tiresome.

          • JDB says:

            @Doug M – yes, it’s still NYC, but NYC is just so passé now if you look for example at the great new big cities of Asia which make NYC look rather provincial with its poxy skyscrapers. Cities like Sydney or Cape Town can fall back on their extraordinary settings, Paris or Buenos Aires with their charm, but today’s New York relies upon its name alone; I was impressed by NYC when I was in my 20s but now it’s really quite unimpressive and grotty vs say Shanghai.

          • rk1 says:

            Spot on about NYC. Lived there for 10 yrs until 2008 the travelled there 5 times a year until 2017. Overpriced and over-rated – I have no desire to return.

    • Mikel says:

      $74 for breakfast !! You just summed it up.

  • Mark says:

    Good review. It’s such a shame there is no easy way of earning Hyatt points in the UK as lots of bits of the programme work really well; let’s hope a UK credit card appears at some point or at least they become an Amex transfer partner!

    • pauldb says:

      Lack of a credit card or partners mean most UK Gloablists will have to earn it the hard way, which means you also have 4 or 6 suite upgrade awards. If you can’t acquire silly numbers of points, you probably won’t make dozens of leisure stays. So I can apply an SU to nearly all my leisure stays and, ironically, I’m less likely to feel short changed.

    • camille55 says:

      Rob – any news on the horizon of (a) Amex adding Hyatt as an MR transfer partner; and/or (b) Chase expanding their UK offering to include a credit card with either Ultimate Rewards or a c–brand with Hyatt (as they do in the US on the Vidsda platform)??

      I appreciate both are long shots!

      • Rob says:

        No and No

        • camille55 says:

          Thanks. Hope something may happen on either front soon, though I am not holding my breath.

          Or perhaps a Star Alliance UK credit card sometime soon.

  • PhatGit says:

    I knew Moxi had small rooms, but 20 square feet!!! I’d have to sleep standing up!

  • Lumma says:

    £600 a night to stay in a Moxi. New York truely is a hellhole

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    The contextual £650/night seemed toppy for a Moxy on this Weds seemed toppy even in Manhattan.

    So just for even more context and including taxes/fees…. Sure enough, with the internetz and 2 minutes of effort, I have all sorts of better (and better located) 4* and 5* options within that budget, right up of a room at the Pierre (!!!) onthe upper east side on that night. I’m sure that’ll be the worst room in the place but even so… Kind of shows what poor value the big mid-market international chains can often be.

    • The Savage Squirrel says:

      …. for retail cash prices anyway. You still can’t argue with the benefits of points buying in Manhattan and this was a nice example of that.

  • Graeme says:

    “(£615 to £660) including taxes, for a standard room of around 20 square feet”.

    I hope the rooms in those 3-star hotels are not this small – that’s less than 2 square metres, which even the smallest of people would struggle with!

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