Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

What are World of Hyatt hotel points worth?

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

This article is our attempt to decide what World of Hyatt points are worth. How should you value them?

Valuing miles and points is a thankless job. We have always published articles on what Avios points are worth, but that Avios article is so complex that it simply proves my point.

In the face of constant reader requests, however, I wrote this series of articles on how we value each of the major hotel points currencies. We are updating the series this month.

You can buy World of Hyatt points directly from Hyatt by clicking here.

What are World of Hyatt points worth?

Here are links to the full series:

The reason I have changed my mind after all these years is that I have found a methodology that works for me. It takes a subjective valuation and then explains the boundaries around it. Or, in plain English:

  • I will tell you (without justifying it) what I think a World of Hyatt point is worth
  • I will tell you, on the upside, how far wrong I can be (which is good news)
  • I will tell you, on the downside, how far wrong I can be (which is bad news)
  • I will tell you what World of Hyatt points are worth if you turn them into something else – usually airline miles – which effectively locks in a floor value

Why I think ‘range’ is important when valuing hotel points

When we look at using Avios for business or First Class flights, the ‘cash alternative’ is often a poor comparison. Most HfP readers don’t want to, or simply can’t afford to, pay cash for business or First Class flights. Their choice is Avios or nothing. Even if you can afford to pay, what are you comparing with? A cheap non-refundable sale flight? A pricier flexible ticket? The cost of an indirect flight, not on BA?

Hotels redemptions are different:

  • you stay in far more hotels each year compared to the number of premium cabin flights you take, so you can be selective about when you use points
  • you can usually afford to pay for a hotel if you choose not to use points
  • there are far more options in the hotel market than in the flight market – most people only have a lot of miles in one airline programme, whereas you are likely to hold hotel points in multiple schemes
What are World of Hyatt points worth?

It is easy to sit on hotel points until you get a good deal

The net result of the three facts above is that it is easy to turn down a hotel redemption when it doesn’t seem like good value. You can pay cash or redeem via another hotel scheme instead.

Here is the crux of what I am trying to say. If you compare two hotel schemes:

  • scheme A usually gets you 0.3p per point but if you are lucky you can get 1p
  • scheme B usually gets you 0.4p per point but if you are lucky you can get 0.6p

…. scheme A may actually be the best.

Most people who try to ‘value’ hotel points don’t take this into account.

If you redeemed points for every stay you did, regardless of the cash price, scheme B would be the best. No-one does this though. In reality you can pay cash for your stays in scheme A until the day when a bumper redemption arrives and you can get 1p.

Here’s a real example. I value Marriott Bonvoy points at 0.5p as our article showed recently. If you do 20 Marriott hotel stays and use Bonvoy points for all of them, I think you will average 0.5p, give or take.

However, last summer I spent five nights at the JW Marriott Resort & Spa in Venice, reviewed here. We booked two Junior Suites for 594,000 points in total. I got 1.0p per point, and this was a ‘real’ saving – I have stayed in these rooms before at this hotel and would have paid cash if needed.

Two years ago, I booked three nights at the Al Maha desert resort in Dubai. This got me 1.5p per Bonvoy point vs my 0.5p valuation.

This week I am at a Marriott resort in Turkey where I am getting 2.0p per Bonvoy point. Admittedly this is not a ‘real’ saving as I wouldn’t have paid the stupendous cash price.

These redemptions justified all of the Marriott stays where I paid cash rather than redeem for 0.5p per point.

What are World of Hyatt points worth?

What are World of Hyatt points worth?

With our methodology out of the way, let’s take a look at what World of Hyatt points are worth.

To keep things simple, we do not adjust for the fact that you would earn points back if you paid cash instead. This can have a noticeable impact when generous bonuses are running.

On the upside, World of Hyatt waives resort fees, where they exist, on redemption nights which must be paid on cash nights.

The HfP average valuation of a World of Hyatt point:

1.2p

Regular readers of this series will know that I do not justify these valuations. In this case, I am making an exception. This is because 1.2p is – slightly oddly – our ‘what is your escape route?’ valuation in case the programme devalues. Irrespective of what value you can get from a free room night, you can still get 1.2p using points to settle extras on your bill as I will show.

Regardless of that, 1.2p also makes sense when looking at the points needed for a free night. The most expensive night in the Hyatt system is just 45,000 points, which is a peak day Category 8. At 1.2p you are looking at £540 and this is for the handful of top properties in the system such as Park Hyatt New York. Even then, Park Hyatt New York – which is rarely under $1,000 for cash, and can often hit $1,500 – will only be 35,000 points on off-peak nights.

It is virtually impossible to get less than 1.2p in the current 2024 hotel market at top Hyatt properties.

Even at mid-market hotels, 20,000 points – £240 at 1.2p – is fair at a mid range big city property. Somewhere more ‘regular’, such as the Hyatt Regency in Stratford, East London, is 9,000 points off-peak. As long as cash rates are above £108, which is pretty much a certainty, you’re beating 1.2p. Similarly, the Hyatt Place at Heathrow is 6,500 points per night off peak, so anything above £78 per night – not exactly tricky – would beat 1.2p.

How high can value go on the upside?

High – very high in the current hotel market – which is good.

Each World of Hyatt hotel has a points price cap, which you can see on this page of their website.

I can quote you silly numbers (40,000 points for my room at Park Hyatt New York last year which was selling for $1,995 per night) but even the briefest look at the redemption chart will show you that there are excellent deals out there at peak travel periods. Hyatt is now the best redemption route for peak season stays in Ibiza (7Pines), Sardinia (7Pines), Santorini etc.

We have also highlighted the value of using World of Hyatt points for suite redemptions such as for my stay in Paris in late 2021 and a stay in Stockholm this year. These are bookable online and represent, £ for £, probably the best use of Hyatt points.

How low can value go on the downside?

Low, in theory, but it rarely happens.

By setting a fixed points price, irrespective of the cash price of the room, there will clearly be cheap days in the year when the value per point is not great. Now that Hyatt has introduced peak and off-peak pricing, however, it should protect your ‘pence per point’ valuation if you do choose to redeem on a night when cash rates are low.

In truth, however, it doesn’t matter. If you are planning a stay and the ‘pence per point’ rate is poor, you can pay cash. Save your points for a day when you can get at least 1.2p and hopefully more.

If World of Hyatt devalues hugely tomorrow, what is my escape route?

This is our floor price. What can you do with your points if World of Hyatt devalues massively overnight?

This is where it gets a bit weird. When we write these articles, we usually show you the ratio of points to airline miles and work out a floor value from that.

(For the record, World of Hyatt points convert at 5:2 into airline miles. This means that if you value an airline mile at 1p, the floor value of a Hyatt point is 0.4p, because 5 Hyatt points are worth 2p of airline miles.)

With Hyatt, there is something better. You can redeem World of Hyatt points for money off your bill, excluding room charges.

Here is the chart showing what you can get:

Hyatt use points for room credit

As you can see, 65,000 World of Hyatt points will get you $1,000 of credit. At the current exchange rate, this is worth 1.2p per point. Your ‘worse case scenario’ is actually your best case scenario much of the time.

You can find out more on this page of the Hyatt site.

In summary …. what do we think World of Hyatt points are worth?

  • on average: 1.2p per point
  • on a very good day: 2p+, most likely at luxury hotels
  • on a bad day: potentially 0.75p, but you can always save your points for next time if you see a redemption where the value is this low
  • if you transfer out to airline miles in a worse case scenario: 0.4p per point
  • if you end up using your points for in-hotel credit: up to 1.2p depending on how many you redeem

As to how this should impact your behaviour:

  • if you tend to visit prime hotels in prime locations at prime times of the year, it makes sense to keep your World of Hyatt points until you can achieve a redemption valuation of 2p or more – this isn’t difficult at the moment
  • if your travel style is more about travelling off peak and staying in mid range hotels, you should refuse to settle for anything less than 1.2p, because this is the value you can get by redeeming points for in-hotel credit

If you want to buy additional World of Hyatt points from Hyatt, the link to buy is here.


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 (23)

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

  • NigelthePensioner says:

    We are about to head back to Nashville and then on to New Orleans again – birthday trip. The 777 club suite out and 788 Club back are reward seats with an AmEx 241. The Grand Hyatt on Broadway is one free club floor night and 6 club room nights paid for well in advance at a members rate ($380). The Ritz Carlton club floor in New Orleans is all on redemption.
    The value of the Avios used is simple to work out – what would the open jaw return flight have cost for the cheapest Club seats not using Avios. I always ignore the voucher as that artificially inflates the value. There is no F on these flights.

  • Gordon says:

    We are in Kenya, points booking at the Hyatt Regency Westland’s, a week ago, and returning at the end of safari, was 9k points standard room , and 13.5K points club room, decent redemption,. But going to cancel our one night stay at the Regency on route to Uganda mid stay, in favour of the Hilton garden inn £128 pn, or the Crown plaza £138 pn at MBA airport both with free shuttle, just makes sense for 1 night, rushed into it not thinking months ago, even thought a one way Uber is £7 to the regency from NBO. flight out LHR-NBO, club suite 777, on a 2-4-1.

  • Gordon says:

    Edit- NBO not MBA, @Ladylondon that’s Nairobi and Mombasa, respectively 😉

  • Steven says:

    Are there certain brands of Hyatt that are better suited for accommodating families of 4 (2 adults and 2 younger children) without having to book two separate rooms? For the ones I’ve looked at in the past, they mostly seem to have a maximum occupancy of 3. Many thanks.

    • Rob says:

      The long stay brands, eg Hyatt House, are better but there aren’t many of them.

      • Steven says:

        Thanks Rob, actually just completed a lovely stay at the Hyatt House in Kanazawa, Japan, which has perhaps influenced me to focus more on Hyatt moving forwards.

      • Gordon says:

        I wanted to book the Hyatt house in Nairobi, to tick another one off the brand explorer, but it’s still not open!

        @Steven – if you ever want to visit the any of the Caribbean islands or indeed Mexico, Hyatt have some great AI properties that accommodate a family of 4 easily, the original ones being Ziva/Zilara, you have even more choice now they have purchased the Apple leisure group, including the likes of Secrets, Zoetry, Dreams, amongst many others. Under the AMR banner!

  • pauldb says:

    Just a thought: I have several Club Access Awards expiring Feb25 that are hard to use as a Globalist, if anyone has a firm use for one. It would always be worth asking in the forums if you’d need one as I can’t be alone, especially as Feb approaches.
    I probably have at least one Guest of Honour and one Suite upgrade I would let go.

    • Steven says:

      How do Club Access Awards work e.g. if you are staying for 3 nights, do you need 3 of these or does 1 just cover the whole booking? The same question applies to other occupants in the room – does the voucher extend to everyone or is it just one per person? Thanks

      • E says:

        Club Access Awards apply to the whole stay. I’ve been OK with it applying to one other person in the room but not sure if it’s still OK if you are a family of 4 in one room for example.

    • Ken says:

      Very decent of you.

  • Bernard says:

    Points are helpful.
    But then there’s the value of the benefits the top tiers get: how much is a personal concierge contact worth, especially someone who delivers suite upgrades even when ‘regular’ tiers don’t or can’t get that at some hotels. (Eg PH New York, Tokyo (pre refurb closure), etc).
    Then add in the feee breakfast, early/late checkout and the benefits of a well run hotel brand.
    So for higher tiers it’s the status level not just points that have value.
    As Hyatt still rewards stays far more than credit card use, devaluation looks less likely.

  • Mat66^66^^ says:

    I’m 4 nights away from hitting Globalist (until Feb’26) following a Corporate Status challenge (20 nights). The million dollar question…are these 4 nights worth a mattress run?

    I’m London-based, usually have been a Bonvoy loyalist but as of late less and less. Am aware Hyatt’s footprint in Europe isn’t fantastic per se, and cash rates can be high vs. Bonvoy, but I’m tempted by the Globalist status.

    What are people’s thoughts?

    • Rob says:

      Snag is that you will Globalist within hitting 60 nights so you DON’T get the Milestone Awards (no guaranteed suite upgrade at time of booking vouchers etc) and that’s where the guaranteed value is.

      You’d be mad not to sneak in 4 cheapo nights at Stratford though, I think. Free breakfast for 2 easily gets you your money back, guaranteed upgrade to best available room including standard suites at check-in is obviously good. If you can see yourself doing, say, 10 Hyatt nights in upscale hotels next year (and the rest of this year) then you’ll get value from it.

    • BSI1978 says:

      Echo a lot of what Rob has written here, albeit care on expecting the Stratford properties to be ‘cheap’. Both Regency and House have been more expensive than expected on a multitude of dates in recent months.

      Subject to your work commitments, you have the Regency in Brum and 2 options in Manchester that could be of use, whilst the Heathrow option is invariably cheaper than most (4 nights there will come in at sub £500 easy all in) and the lizzie line makes it a realistic option even if heading into town or the west end.

      I’m currently Globalist and am a big fan, admittedly I’ve been lucky that a number of stays in Europe this year have had decent Hyatt options, and I still have 7 nights in Malta next month to help me in my aim of retaining Globalist.

      Status always recognised, have had some cracking upgrades and service although I will admit to not having had absolute top status in any other scheme to compare it too.

  • brian says:

    I assume that given these points are valued at +1.2p and 55,000 points can be bought each year for considerably less is why Rob buys the max each year?

    Does buying points count as membership activity to ensure that unused purchases points won’t expire?

    • Gordon says:

      Yes they do, as long as there is activity on the account it resets the clock again.

    • Rob says:

      Yes, counts as activity.

      You’ll get 4p per point at, say, Park Hyatt NY on a pricey day. Upgrading the cheapest cash room to the top suite is never more than 9,000 points so £108 on our valuation.

    • brian says:

      That’s good to hear. Will take a closer look at redemption availability and if it’s any way similar to Hilton then I might just buy the 55,000 a year whenever there’s a promotion on (the 20% one at the moment doesn’t seem too bad, although I see mention of a potential 33% discount every so often).

      • Gordon says:

        I haven’t seen the 33% offer for quite some time?
        But I will be taking advantage of the 9k points suite upgrade in Bogata at Christmas.

      • Rob says:

        You are better buying with a bonus, rather than a discount, because a bonus lets you exceed the 55k annual cap.

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.