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Review: Is World of Hyatt the best hotel loyalty scheme? (Part 1)

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This is the sixth and last of our overview series of the main hotel loyalty schemes.  Each scheme will be covered over two articles.  One will list the basic facts of the scheme – basically “How does World of Hyatt work?” – whilst the other will be my subjective view of what is of particular merit.

The full series of articles can be found here:

World of Hyatt is the smallest of the global hotel loyalty schemes. Launched in early 2017 to replace Hyatt Gold Passport, it covers 1,300 hotels globally under brands including Park Hyatt, Grand Hyatt, Hyatt, Hyatt Regency, Hyatt House, Hyatt Place, Hyatt Centric, Hyatt Vacation Club, Hyatt Zilara, Hyatt Ziva, Caption, Alila, Thompson Hotels, Miraval, Lindner, me and all, Destination by Hyatt, jdv, The Unbound Collection and Andaz. The World of Hyatt home page is here.

Recent acquisitions include a number of mass-market all-inclusive hotels in 2021, including the Zoetry, Breathless and Secrets brands, the Dream group in 2022, Standard Hotels in 2024 (not yet integrated) and all-inclusive group Playa in 2025.

The Mr & Mrs Smith marketing group was acquired in 2023, which has seen most ‘Smith’ hotels become bookable via Hyatt. This has come at the cost of losing the partnership with Small Luxury Hotels of the World.

What is the geographic spread?  Historically you used to struggle to find a Hyatt in the UK, but the situation has changed a lot.

In recent years the two established London hotels (Andaz, The Churchill) have been joined by Hyatt Place properties (one at Heathrow, one at Aldgate reviewed here) and the upmarket Great Scotland Yard, part of The Unbound Collection (review here).

It has also taken a number of hotels from IHG, including two hotels in the Westfield Stratford complex (now a Hyatt Regency reviewed here and a Hyatt House reviewed here), the Crowne Plaza at Albert Embankment (now Hyatt Regency) and the Crowne Plaza opposite Blackfriars station (now Hyatt Regency).

The flagship Park Hyatt London River Thames opened in late 2024, reviewed here.

The London pipeline includes a Hyatt Place near Paddington and a Hyatt Regency at Olympia. The Standard hotel opposite London King’s Cross station – image below – should be integrated into World of Hyatt in the next couple of months.

The brand gained two hotels in Manchester which defected from IHG (Hyatt Regency, Hyatt House) and has added SCHLOSS Roxburghe, a resort in Scotland reviewed here. The pipeline includes two hotels in Leeds (due to open next month) and Edinburgh.

More importantly, the hotels Hyatt has are generally excellent. Park Hyatt is arguably the most luxurious hotel chain that is run by a multi-brand group.

Do I use them?  Yes I do, because they are very good hotels.  I spent probably 20 nights at Park Hyatt Hamburg over the years visiting family there, although this hotel closed at the end of 2022.  I stayed at the Grand Hyatt Berlin (review), Hyatt Regency Amsterdam (review), Hyatt Regency Nice (review), Andaz Prague (review) and Grand Hyatt Barcelona (review) in the last couple of years and all were uniformly excellent. In 2023 I finally made it to Alila in Oman after my 2020 plans got postponed due to covid, and I have had two excellent stays at Park Hyatt New York.

(Rhys covered Hyatt Regency Kotor Bay in Montenegro last year and Park Hyatt Milan. As well as Park Hyatt London, Great Scotland Yard and SCHLOSS Roxburghe, Conny also got to Park Hyatt Zurich reviewed here and Lindner Boltenhagen, reviewed here.)

If they had more properties, I would use them more.  If it were easier to earn Hyatt points in the UK, I would use them a lot more, although I have got a lot of value in recent years from buying World of Hyatt points.

The ‘upgrade your room to a small suite for 6,000 points per night or a large suite for 9,000 points per night’ offer is one of the best bargains in all hotel loyalty. Given that you can buy World of Hyatt points for around 1.5p during bonus promotions you can see the value here.

World of Hyatt review

Elite membership levels

Whilst the bizarre elite tier names were very confusing when first launched, people seem to have got used to them – although I’m still not sure what percentage of casual members could tell you that the top tier is called Globalist!

The tiers are:

  • Discoverist – requires 10 nights or 25,000 base points. Benefits are premium internet, a free bottle of water daily and a 10% bonus on base points.
  • Explorist – requires 30 nights or 50,000 base points. Additional benefits are 20% bonus on base points, two vouchers for free Club Lounge access and a free night voucher for a Category 1-4 hotel (valid for 180 days) when hitting or re-qualifying for Explorist.
  • Globalist – requires 60 nights or 100,000 base points. Additional benefits are room upgrades, including standard suites, and guaranteed Club Lounge access or free breakfast where no lounge is available. Resort fees are waived where charged.

Hyatt also has attractive ‘Milestone Rewards’

Hyatt has additional ‘Milestone Rewards’ which you pick up as you go, based on the number of nights you do each year. If you received free or matched World of Hyatt status then you would NOT receive these and would miss out on suite upgrade vouchers, bonus points and lounge passes.

Milestone Rewards start at 20 nights. Free night vouchers kick in from 30 nights and suite upgrade vouchers, valid on paid or reward stays, start at 40 nights. Suite upgrade vouchers are confirmed at the time of booking and are valid for stays of up to seven nights making it the most generous suite upgrade benefit in the industry.

You also earn British Airways equivalent status as Milestone Rewards! At 70 nights you can take American Airlines Gold status (which gives you benefits of British Airways Bronze status) as a milestone award. More interestingly, at 100 nights, you can take American Airlines Platinum status, which is equivalent to British Airways Silver status.

Following recent changes, you can keep earning Milestone Rewards on up to 150 nights per year.

World of Hyatt review

Hyatt Brand Explorer is also worthwhile

All members can earn a free night voucher for a Category 1-4 hotel via ‘Hyatt Brand Explorer’ when staying at five different brandsThis is a lifelong promotion which began on 1st March 2017 – I have triggered two free nights so far and a Mr & Mrs Smith stay this week has set me on the way to my third. It’s a worthwhile little extra which many people ignore.

Reward nights count towards elite status.

The full list of elite benefits is here.

World of Hyatt does offer lifetime Globalist status. However, the target of 1m base points – requiring $200,000 of hotel spend – is exceptionally high.

How do you earn World of Hyatt points?

World of Hyatt gives 5 points per $1 spent plus an elite bonus if applicable.  See the Hyatt site here.

Hyatt runs regular promotions although they do NOT offer ‘back to back’ offers as you usually get from Hilton Honors, IHG One Rewards and Marriott Bonvoy.  See our ‘Hotel Offers‘ page for any current offers.

What are World of Hyatt points worth?

We have an article dedicated to working out what World of Hyatt points are worth which you can find here.

Our mid-point valuation is 1.2p per point although you can easily beat this.

World of Hyatt review

How do you spend World of Hyatt points?

Hyatt retains a reward chart, unlike most of its peers. You can see it here.

Redemption rates for hotels run from 3,500 points in Category 1 at off-peak periods (the cheapest properties, mainly old US hotels) to 45,000 points in Category 8 at peak periods.

Category 8 is only used for a handful of premium hotels such as Park Hyatt New York.

Apart from the handful of Category 8 hotels, you won’t pay more than 35,000 points for any Hyatt-operated property. There are separate rules for the new all-inclusive hotels.

There are no discounts for extended redemptions, unlike the ‘five for four’ deals run by Hilton and Marriott.

Mr & Mrs Smith hotels do not fit into the reward chart and are priced on a revenue-based basis. The ‘pence per point’ ratio is not as good as redeeming for a ‘core’ Hyatt property.

Hyatt lets you book suites and club rooms online for points. The number of additional points required is usually modest. Here is an example of how I used a small number of points for a suite upgrade in Paris, which also got me lounge access.

There are no blackout dates. If a standard room can be bought for cash, it is available for points. This is an exceptionally strong benefit which can be worth its weight in gold if you need a hotel on a peak day.

A 5-star 25,000 point Category 6 redemption would typically require an Explorist (base) member to spend $4,150. Unlike Hilton, which has a similar requirement, Hyatt promotions tend to be less generous so it is harder to reduce this spending target.

It is worth noting that Hyatt has a very generous offer for redeeming points for in-hotel spend. 65,000 points gets you $1,000 of credit, which is 1.2p per point. This is better than many room redemptions.

Review world of hyatt

Do World of Hyatt points expire?

Hyatt points will expire after two years of total inactivity on your account. I wrote a full article on Hyatt’s expiry policies, and ways to stop it happening, here.

Can you upgrade Hyatt stays using points?

Yes. Hyatt allows you to upgrade to a suite or club room using points. A ‘premium’ suite will cost 9,000 points per night, a ‘standard’ suite will cost 6,000 points per night whilst a club room is 3,000 points per night. You need to book a room at Best Flexible Rate to upgrade and a lot of top hotels do not participate.  If a hotel has made suites available for this offer it can represent excellent value.

Are ‘cash and points’ redemptions available?

Yes, Hyatt offers ‘cash and points’ rooms. However, these do not generally offer good value.

You pay 50% of the standard points rate and 50% of the flexible room rate. This makes ‘cash and points’ disproportionately expensive because most hotels have discounted cash deals priced below the flexible rate.

Can you transfer World of Hyatt points into airline miles?

World of Hyatt points can be transferred to a large number of airlines including Avios. The transfer ratio of 2.5 : 1 is not bad. However, given that you can get a one-night upgrade to a suite for just 6,000 Hyatt points, I would use them for that.

Hyatt points are tough to earn if you are UK based and should not be transferred to airline miles unless you are sure you will never use them for a room.

World of Hyatt review

Can I earn Avios directly without collecting points?

No. You need to earn points and then convert them when you hit the minimum threshold.

Credit card partnerships

Can you get elite status with a UK credit card? No

Is there a World of Hyatt credit card in the UK? No

Is Hyatt an Amex Membership Rewards partner? No

Bottom line – virtually the only way for a UK resident to obtain Hyatt points is to stay in their hotels or to buy them (but only during a promotion). That is a very radical approach in 2025!

Purchasing and transferring points

You can buy World of Hyatt points for $24 per 1,000 via this link. This is not cheap, but can actually represent a deal if using the points for a suite or club room upgrade (6,000 and 3,000 points per night). 

Over the last few years Hyatt has become more aggressive in offering 25%-33% bonuses when buying points, reducing the cost further. I have done this a couple of times when it was cheaper to buy points than book a room for cash and I find myself buying the maximum (55,000) points each year during a good bonus period.

As an example, I booked Park Hyatt Paris Vendome on points last September (I didn’t review the stay). This was selling for €1,485 per night (£1,225) at the time of booking but I purchased the 45,000 points required for $816 (£645) when a 33% ‘buy points’ bonus was running. The savings you can make in Ibiza, Santorini etc during peak season are substantial. Any current offers will show here.

Points can be transferred to other members by filling in this form here and emailing it to Hyatt. There is no charge for this. However, as I found out to my cost a couple of years ago, you can only do it if both members have had a stay within the last 12 months. This means that you cannot save expiring points by transferring them.

My opinion

In Part Two of our World of Hyatt review, click here, I give my personal opinion on the strengths and weaknesses of the scheme.


World of Hyatt update – March 2025:

Get bonus points: Hyatt is offering double base points (triple at Hyatt Place and Hyatt House) between 27th January and 28th March 2025. You must register here by 10th March. Click here for our full article.

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 (8)

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

  • 1958 says:

    “There are no blackout dates”.
    Well, I tried to book a Hyatt Regency in Australia using points. The website said No rooms available.
    I then edited my request to “pay cash” – and rooms are available.
    – Has the policy changed, or do I need to call Hyatt Central Reservations?
    (Ps – Recently enjoyed a few stays in Hyatts in Melbourne and Canberra, booked through Emyr. Great value + but I can’t seem to use my points).

    • Rob says:

      Has to be a standard room, ie the cheapest cash room. You are likely seeing something like ‘Standard with View’ available for cash whereas ‘Standard’ rooms for both cash and rewards are not available.

      You can call Hyatt and get the call centre to forcibly book you in if the lowest level of cash room is not showing.

      The only get out is that a hotel can impose a minimum stay at peak times.

  • BSI1978 says:

    @Rob – any idea where the Edinburgh hotel is going to be situated? No details on the Hyatt site so may just be pipeline only.

    Does suggest that the Centric brand is coming to Cambridge/Haymarket idc.

    • Peggerz says:

      @BSI1978 The Edinburgh Hyatt is to be at Haymarket where there are quite a few buildings going up. It was chalked in to open Summer 2025 but don’t know if that has slipped.

      • Stu_N says:

        It’s in the Haymarket mixed use development on a site that used to be a car park by Morrison Link/ Morrison St/ Gorgie Road. Definitely not opening summer 25 by the look of the site last week.

  • pauldb says:

    I think the option of taking AA Gold or Platinum as a Milestone Benefit (at 70/100 nights) is worth including in the fundamentals.

  • AL says:

    Did a Hyatt status match to Globalist last year – ten nights in three months, all done at the HR Embankment. Enjoy that property a lot, and have always had good experiences at Hyatt properties.

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

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