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As a Hyatt Globalist, Here’s Why I’m Undecided About Hyatt’s 2026 Changes

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Ryan Smith
Edited by: Michael Y. Park
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There have been plenty of hot takes about World of Hyatt lately.

Most reactions seem to fall into 2 categories: knee-jerk outrage and thoughtful analysis about possibilities. Personally, I don’t find either of these particularly helpful.

Yes, Hyatt has announced big changes to its award categories and award chart, but we won’t really know how the program looks until they are implemented — and that’s why I’m reserving judgment for now.

Here’s why I’m not panicking about Hyatt’s upcoming changes just yet, and why I’m waiting for May 20 to make up my mind.

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Recap of Hyatt’s 2026 Changes

On May 20, 2026, the World of Hyatt program will introduce 2 major changes:

If you’re eyeing a property that will become more expensive, it’s worth booking now. You can pay the lower price on points bookings now, even if the property is moving into a higher category before your stay. On the flip side, if you book a property now and it moves down a category, Hyatt will refund you the difference in points after the changes.

Hot Tip:

There’s also an underrated Globalist status benefit worth mentioning here: Points Advance. This benefit allows Globalists to reserve award stays even without having enough points in their account at the time of booking.
If you’re interested in a property that’s about to increase in cost, your Hyatt Concierge may be able to help lock in the reservation now, provided you have the necessary points in your account before check-in.

My Honest Analysis of the Changes

Let’s look at each of these in turn — both what we know and what we don’t.

Hyatt’s 2026 Award Category Changes Aren’t Surprising

World of Hyatt award categories determine how many points you need for a hotel stay. When a hotel moves up from Category 3 to Category 4, you need more points to book it. Conversely, if a property moves from 4 down to 3, you need fewer points. This happens every year.

Hyatt Secrets Playa Esmeralda Lobby 4
Secrets Playa Esmeralda in the Dominican Republic, part of Hyatt’s Inclusive Collection.

Every year, there are property changes that sting a bit, but they haven’t ever affected my travel plans.

The 2026 changes do sting at the top of the chart, with multiple properties moving from Category 7 to 8. This is especially painful for people who redeem points at Hyatt’s most aspirational properties. Now, those properties will require more points and will be out of reach of a Category 1-7 Free Night Award.

Still, I think many of these reactions have been a little overblown. Part of playing the points-and-miles game is adapting to devaluations over time. When properties are extremely popular, hotel chains recognize that and, in turn, make them more expensive. We are part of why these changes happen.

And while more hotels are moving up than down, there are still some positive adjustments mixed in.

Hyatt’s New 5-Tier Award Pricing System

The bigger story (and the one generating the most concern) is Hyatt’s shift from 3 pricing bands to 5.

Right now, each category in the World of Hyatt award chart has 3 pricing bands: peak, standard, and off-peak. No matter when you book, pricing always falls into those 3 fixed options. You might see off-peak points pricing on a random Tuesday but find peak pricing when traveling during a holiday or the weekend of a big college football game.

As of May 20, 2026, however, Hyatt will move to 5 pricing bands: lowest, low, moderate, upper, and top.

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World of Hyatt Category

Lowest

Low

Moderate

Upper

Top

1

3,000

4,500

6,000

7,500

9,000

2

6,000

7,500

10,000

12,000

15,000

3

8,000

12,000

15,000

17,500

20,000

4

12,000

15,000

20,000

22,500

25,000

5

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

6

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

40,000

7

25,000

30,000

35,000

45,000

55,000

8

35,000

45,000

55,000

65,000

75,000

The good news is that “lowest” prices will be below the “off-peak” pricing currently available. The bad news is that “top” pricing is much higher than the current “peak” price in each tier — sometimes up to 67% higher for the exact same hotel category.

Right now, we don’t know how often each pricing band will be used.

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Why I’m Still on the Fence

Now that we know what’s happening, let’s look at why I haven’t determined it “good” or “bad” just yet.

Starting with the category changes, I’m 99% indifferent about them. Sure, it sucks to pay more points for a hotel this month than I did last month. However, I’ve been around points and miles for many years, and devaluations are an unfortunate reality.

Hyatt Regency Irvine bedroom
Hyatt Regency Irvine in California.

Some United flights cost more miles this year than they did last year. Some Marriott hotels cost more points this year than they did last year. It’s just how things go — and I’ve accepted it.

In Hyatt’s case, it doesn’t feel egregious, so I haven’t cared much.

The bigger story is the change to the pricing model, introducing 5 price points within each category. But there’s still a major unknown: We don’t know how often each pricing category will be used.

Under Hyatt’s current setup, hotels must evenly distribute their peak, standard, and off-peak nights on the calendar. This means a hotel can’t simply designate every desirable date as peak pricing.

There’s no guarantee that hotels will have to do this when the new award chart kicks in, which is the worrying point. However, I’m reserving judgment until I see things in practice. If hotels are free to heavily favor “upper” and “top” pricing while rarely offering “lowest” or “low” nights, then many of the concerns people have raised will absolutely prove justified.

But we simply don’t know yet whether that’s how the system will be implemented. That uncertainty is why I’m still on the fence. Until I actually see how pricing looks in practice after May 20, I don’t think it makes sense to declare the program ruined.

Final Thoughts

I’ve seen everything from silence to “RIP” as a response to Hyatt’s upcoming May 20 changes. The reality is probably somewhere in the middle.

As someone with Hyatt’s top-tier elite status, I haven’t decided if these changes are good or bad yet. The problem is that we don’t know for sure how many nights will be assigned the new, more expensive prices, how many will be assigned the lower prices, or how many won’t really be affected — and Hyatt hasn’t helped itself by not clarifying any constraints. But until the new model is here, I’m reserving my personal judgment.

Fingers crossed the doomsday predictions on the internet are wrong.

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About Ryan Smith

Ryan completed his goal of visiting every country in the world in December of 2023 and is now revisiting some favorites. Over the years, he’s written about award travel and credit cards for publications like AwardWallet, The Points Guy, USA Today Blueprint, CNBC Select, Tripadvisor, Point.me, Forbes Advisor, and more.

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