Ouch: Hyatt Annual Award Increases Are Out and the Majority of Hotels Move Up

by Anthony Losanno
World of Hyatt

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Hyatt is rolling out the annual update to the redemption costs for its World of Hyatt® loyalty program (this coincides with the introduction of a new five-tier redemption structure) This year the change will impact 136 hotels worldwide (with 112 increasing in cost).

Hyatt has confirmed the category shifts with the update taking effect on May 20th. Only 24 properties are moving down in cost this year. Everything from Park Hyatt to Hyatt Place locations are going to cost more.

The changes are especially pronounced in the United States, which accounts for 53% of the affected properties. Most US hotels on the list are increasing in category. California, Florida, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, and Texas will see the most change. Limited-service brands such as Hyatt Place and Hyatt House make up a large portion of the adjustments (60 out of 64 of those properties are moving up).

Internationally, Europe, the Caribbean, and Latin America are also seeing widespread increases. In contrast, the Asia-Pacific region stands out as an exception. Several properties in China are moving down in category.

Hyatt Regency Aruba 107

Some high-profile properties are moving into the top Category 8 tier, including Hôtel du Louvre in Paris, Park Hyatt London, Andaz 5th Avenue (review here), and Hyatt Regency Aruba Resort Spa and Casino (review here). The shift also means the loss of many Category 4 hotels, which have historically been popular among travelers redeeming free night certificates.

Hyatt has set May 20th as the effective date for both the new award chart and the category changes. Reservations made before that date under the current structure will still be honored. This gives travelers a limited window to lock in lower redemption rates at affected properties.

Despite the increases, Hyatt maintains that its award chart will remain straightforward and accessible with the new five-tier system designed to provide more flexibility across a broader range of redemption options. However they want to spin it, this will make many properties 67% more expensive than they are now. Hyatt points are not easy to earn and these redemptions will become out of reach for many travelers.

Anthony’s Take: For travelers planning future stays, the upcoming changes make early booking more important than ever (particularly for properties that are about to move into higher redemption tiers). World of Hyatt® is still a great loyalty program, but these changes suck no matter what the corporate speak tries to tell you.

(Image Credits: Hyatt.)

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Advertiser & Editorial Disclosure: The Bulkhead Seat earns an affiliate commission for anyone approved through the links above This compensation may impact how and where links appear on this site. We work to provide the best publicly available offers to our readers. We frequently update them, but this site does not include all available offers. Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed, or approved by any of these entities.

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