It’s a pretty exciting time for the Park Hyatt portfolio in Mexico. We recently saw the opening of one property, with two more in the pipeline. Along those lines, there’s a positive update, as the new Park Hyatt Mexico City has just started accepting reservations.
In this post:
Basics of the new Park Hyatt Mexico City
The Park Hyatt Mexico City is now accepting reservations for stays as of January 12, 2027. It’s a bit unusual to see a hotel accepting reservations nearly a year out, and for that matter, this timeline seems optimistic, based on my understand of the construction progress. But still, it’s cool to see that we’re moving closer to an opening.
Plans for this hotel were first announced back in 2017. At the time, it was supposed to open in early 2021. As is all too common with new hotel openings, that was nowhere close to reflecting reality. But hey, an additional five or six years behind schedule, it sounds like this property will finally welcome some guests!
The Park Hyatt Mexico City is expected to feature 155 guest rooms and 23 residences, and it’ll be located on the upscale Campos Elíseos Street, overlooking Mexico City’s Chapultepec Park. It’ll be located right next to the existing Hyatt Regency Mexico City, which is an interesting decision.
So far, there’s not all that much information about the property, and just some very artistic renderings, which you can find below. We do know the hotel will feature at least two restaurants, an outdoor pool, and a full service spa.






The hotel is being developed in partnership with SOMA Group. In November 2024, the company shared the below video about the state of construction. Obviously things are much further along now, but still, I think it’s a cool video in terms of understanding the building and area.
With the Park Hyatt Mexico City now bookable, what are rates like?
- This will be a Category 6 World of Hyatt property, meaning that a free night award will cost anywhere from 21,000 to 29,000 points per night
- As of now the hotel is only bookable for a short window in early 2027, and cash rates are around $700 per night for a base room; if you are paying cash, I recommend booking through the Hyatt Privé program, to receive extra perks
How this fits into the Mexico City hotel scene
What’s kind of cool is that up until recently, Mexico had zero Park Hyatt properties. However, by 2027, the country should have three properties of the brand. The Park Hyatt Los Cabos opened in late 2025, and the Park Hyatt Cancun is also under development (though it’s my understanding the project may be having some issues?).
Mexico City is quite a competitive hotel market, with so many brands represented. While there are lots of luxury properties, interestingly, there aren’t many belonging to the major hotel loyalty programs.
Marriott has a Ritz-Carlton and St. Regis, and Accor has a Sofitel (Accor has a loyalty program, but since it’s strictly revenue based, I don’t get too excited about redemption opportunities). Meanwhile Hilton and Hyatt don’t have any of their true luxury brands represented there. Currently, Hyatt’s most luxurious property in Mexico City is probably the Andaz Mexico City Condesa, but that’s more upscale than luxury.
This will be a very nice addition to the Mexico City luxury points hotel scene. The Ritz-Carlton and Sofitel are the only modern, luxury points hotel in the city, but elite perks with the programs aren’t great. So I think the Park Hyatt will be the most exciting luxury points hotel in the city.

Bottom line
The Park Hyatt Mexico City is now accepting reservations for stays as of early 2027. The 155-room property looks beautiful, and should be an excellent new points property in the city. I look forward to learning more details as the opening date approaches.
What do you make of the Park Hyatt Mexico City?
Park Hyatt Mex 2027 not really impressive. Lets see what reverberates thru Hyatt with their top leader quick resignation for serious offences. Cookie crumbles from the top ?
$700/night in Mexico?!?!?!?! And risk your life on top of that? NO THANKS!
I'm assuming that you wrote this review before the unfortunate little incident in PV this past weekend. Surprised that you didn't have time to either edit this piece or at the least, pull it and send it out at a later time.
Just as a suggestion, would be interested to hear a Hyatt follow-up how reservations are going, any deals to fill up rooms and any other ancillary information because of the "boys will be boys" weekend.
Having had an underwhelming experience in Acapulco, I've never had much interest in returning to the Pacific coast. But this may be a good opportunity to reserve stuff for the autumn. Having said that, CDMX might as well be on another planet as far as the recent developments are concerned.
I do really hope you understand that PV and Mexico City ( where the PH will open next year) are located in 2 different states in Mexico and are thousands of miles away! Your comment is pretty much like saying that you will not visit a new property in Miami because ICE is killing US Citizens in MSP
I do really hope you understand that PV and Mexico City ( where the PH will open next year) are located in 2 different states in Mexico and are thousands of miles away! Your comment is pretty much like saying that you will not visit a new property in Miami because ICE is killing US Citizens in MSP
Great development, hopefully it'll manage to pinch enough American visitors away from the Sofitel and the NH Collection (the suite I had there last time was superb, and the ground floor bar was rated #3 in the world's top 50 list) to push their rates down a bit.
PH and ROSEWOOD were supposed to be open for the World Cup in June, buf they will not be ready
Owners aren’t pleased
Just like Qatar s World Cup, a lot of hotels will not be ready and owners will lose a lot of money
Pendry, SO/, Thompson, Standard, Mama Shelter, Hyde, a 2nd Kimpton are just a few of the new hotels that are supposed to join Park Hyatt and Rosewood in Mexico City in the next months , just not sure if they will be ready for the World Cup
Mexico? Hahahahaha! No thanks!
Mexico City, definitely safer than a lot ot major US cities
NO ITS NOT!!! DO YOU ACTUALLY WATCH THE NEWS????
I don’t need to watch the news Dave, I live in Mexico City and nothing happened here. What you are watching in the news is very specific areas of Jalisco state , mostly in Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara, and it was only on sunday there, everything is back to normal ( completely opposite of what we have watched in cities like Minneapolis where your own citizens get killed ) if you care to take a...
I don’t need to watch the news Dave, I live in Mexico City and nothing happened here. What you are watching in the news is very specific areas of Jalisco state , mostly in Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara, and it was only on sunday there, everything is back to normal ( completely opposite of what we have watched in cities like Minneapolis where your own citizens get killed ) if you care to take a look into a map of the country you will see that is indeed miles and miles away from Mexico City. I invite you to learn some geography and educate yourself so you dont do such baseless and unfounded posts
Oh yeah, totally normal to watch tourist areas go up in flames! Enjoy living in your third world S Hole country!
@dave stafford : thanks for asuming Im not american. Reality is that I am but got indeed exhausted of living in a S Hole Country where people like you do nothing but insulting others so I decided to move to Mexico City, as many other thousands of fellow Americans and we can’t be happier here! If you want to continue watching reality altered TV Im pretty sure you must be watching the State of the...
@dave stafford : thanks for asuming Im not american. Reality is that I am but got indeed exhausted of living in a S Hole Country where people like you do nothing but insulting others so I decided to move to Mexico City, as many other thousands of fellow Americans and we can’t be happier here! If you want to continue watching reality altered TV Im pretty sure you must be watching the State of the Union right now , in let me guess, non other than FOX NEWS! Good for you
Keep making America a Hateful Country
God Bless!!
On that block in Polanco there is the Hyatt Regency (which is an interesting hotel .. rebrand of some Japanese property), an Intercontinental, a JW Marriott, and a W. There is also a Four Seasons nearby on the border between Polanco and Condesa (near the St. Regis) on Reforma. Plenty of other major branded hotels on Reforma.
I guess I'm not seeing your take here Ben. I guess its cool there's going to be a...
On that block in Polanco there is the Hyatt Regency (which is an interesting hotel .. rebrand of some Japanese property), an Intercontinental, a JW Marriott, and a W. There is also a Four Seasons nearby on the border between Polanco and Condesa (near the St. Regis) on Reforma. Plenty of other major branded hotels on Reforma.
I guess I'm not seeing your take here Ben. I guess its cool there's going to be a Park Hyatt but I don't think there are any broader implications for the hotel points scene or aspirational properties in Mexico City.
Only stayed at the Hyatt Regency and Intercontinental out of those hotels - both woefully dated. Also tried the Andaz but struggled with pervasive sewage smell and suboptimal location. So yes, I’m pretty excited for the PH as an additional option for work trips to CDMX.
Condesa is suboptimal? Maybe for business travelers, but for vacationers it’s excellent
Agree 10000 %
Yes, Hyatt Regency was the iconic NIKKO Mexico City Hotel for ages
Ben covers hotels across the major "points" families as you would expect, hence the article, when a flagship of one of those families opens in one of the most significant cities in the hemisphere.
I stayed in the Intercontinental you mention just a few weeks back, it's really out of date. There's room for a lot more top-end hotels in the biggest municipality in North America.
155 *rooms*? I love to hear it. :-)
Keys
It's located next to a Hyatt Regency bc it's the same owner and it's one plot of land. They decided to redo some underutilized space to build the PH tower next to it. But it's bc of the owner ongoing affiliation with Hyatt that caused the property to be purpose built as a PH and gives Hyatt confidence the luxury property will open as a member of the Hyatt portfolio (vs skipping off to the ever growing list of other options)
Glad they didn’t open this week… *gulp*
(For real, glad to see a new PH, anywhere. And Mexico City is actually pretty awesome.)