Best Hyatt Category 1-4 Hotels For Maximizing Free Nights

Best Hyatt Category 1-4 Hotels For Maximizing Free Nights

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With the World of Hyatt program, there are lots of opportunities to earn Category 1-4 free night awards. For that matter, the World of Hyatt Credit Card (review) currently has an improved welcome offer, where you can earn five Category 1-4 free night awards after completing minimum spending.

While that’s much better than the previous bonus, I get that that to many people, a handful of free night awards with category caps might not sound that appealing. However, there are so many reasons to get this card, as it offers amazing long term value.

In this post I wanted to talk a bit about how I approach redeeming Hyatt’s Category 1-4 free night awards. Sure, they won’t get you stays at top properties in Manhattan, but I still find these to be incredibly useful, even as someone who tends to prefer luxury hotels.

How to earn Hyatt Category 1-4 free night awards

To start, let’s talk about all the ways to earn Category 1-4 free night awards with World of Hyatt:

Note that there are also opportunities to earn Category 1-7 free night awards, especially if you have World of Hyatt Globalist status. However, I’m focusing specifically on the Category 1-4 free night awards in this post, since they’re more restrictive in terms of the properties you can redeem at.

Park Hyatt Jakarta

My Hyatt Category 1-4 free night award strategy

World of Hyatt is my primary hotel loyalty program, and I earn a good number of Category 1-4 free night awards, both through having Hyatt’s co-branded credit card, as well as through being a lifetime World of Hyatt Globalist member. I don’t ever recall having one of these expire, and consistently redeem these at hotels that would charge at least $200 per night, and in many cases, way more.

Do I wish it were possible to top these off with points, to redeem at more expensive properties? Of course! Heck, I wish Hyatt would boost these to Category 1-5 free night certificates, given how much category inflation we’ve seen. Do I acknowledge that these aren’t valuable if you want to go to Manhattan, or want to stay at a Park Hyatt in the United States? Of course!

Despite that, I still consistently get great value from these free night certificates. What’s my strategy?

  • The further you get from the United States, the more opportunities there are to redeem these certificates at legitimate luxury hotels, where you’ll actually have a great experience
  • Sometimes you travel to destinations that just don’t have luxury hotels, and where a limited service property could still be very expensive if paying in cash, but is bookable with a Category 1-4 free night award
  • You can get the most value by redeeming in peak season, or in situations where the rate would be really high in cash, but it’s affordable with points

Personally, I kind of view these as being my practical hotel free night certificates, rather than my aspirational free night certificates. When I want to stay at a property and am sort of offended by the price (as is so often the case in the United States nowadays), these really come in handy.

To give some examples, I often stay at the Hyatt Place St. Petersburg, since it’s near my family. If paying cash, that hotel often retails for over $250 per night (it has a central location), yet it’s still a Category 4 World of Hyatt property.

Similarly, I recently had an overnight near Boston Logan Airport, and I booked the Hyatt Regency Boston Harbor using one of these certificates, as it’s a Category 4 property. If paying cash, the rate would’ve been over $300. The same is true at the Hyatt Regency JFK at Resorts World, which is my preferred hotel when overnighting near New York Kennedy Airport.

I think sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking of hotel points and free night certificates exclusively in terms of aspirational, bucket list destinations. Yes, it’s great to be able to redeem points at the Waldorf Astoria Maldives, but when you look at how cash rates for hotels in the United States have increased, there’s something to be said for practical, useful redemptions as well.

Park Hyatt Siem Reap

Some solid Hyatt Category 1-4 hotels

As a reminder, Category 4 World of Hyatt properties ordinarily retail for 12,000 to 18,000 points per night. Specifically, the pricing is 12,000 points on off-peak dates, 15,000 points on standard dates, and 18,000 points on peak dates. So obviously you’ll get the most value from these certificates if redeeming in peak season.

World of Hyatt has a webpage that will show you hotels by category and region, which I find to be the best way to get inspiration for how to redeem these free night certificates. Just visit this page, and then select your preferred region and category.

I’m not a fan of lists of “top X properties to redeem certificates at,” because Hyatt adjusts categories every year, and for that matter, we all have different travel goals. You should redeem these when there’s a Hyatt you want to stay at and it’s expensive in cash.

However, I wanted to list out some properties in each region that are Category 4 or lower, which I think are worth a look.

In the United States and Canada, you’ll find the fewest exciting options, though here are some solid properties that could represent a good value with a certificate:

Thompson Washington D.C.

In the Caribbean and Latin America, here are a couple of properties that stand out:

Park Hyatt Mendoza

In Europe, here are some properties that are worth considering:

Hyatt Centric Murano Venice

In the Middle East and Africa, here are some noteworthy properties:

Grand Hyatt Kuwait Residences

In Australia and the South Pacific, here are some hotels that cap out at Category 4:

Grand Hyatt Melbourne

Last but most certainly not least, here are some of the great properties in Asia where you can redeem Category 1-4 free night awards:

Park Hyatt Suzhou

Bottom line

While Hyatt’s Category 1-4 free night awards might not be the most aspirational free night certificates out there, I still find them to be super useful. No, they won’t get you free nights in the Maldives, but I almost always use them at properties that cost well over $200 per night if paying cash.

With how hotel rates have evolved, I view these more as practical free night certificates, rather than aspirational ones. That being said, if you’re willing to travel a bit further from the United States, you can use these for some awesome Park Hyatt properties as well.

What’s your strategy for redeeming Hyatt Category 1-4 free night awards?

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  1. Mike K Guest

    I’m almost a Lifetime Globalist 2x qualifier - quite the dedication to the Hyatt brand for sure. I often consider staycations or some of the newer brands what have a cat 4 scoring.

    While it is nice for the family to enjoy an extra night nearby, often find Hyatt Mission Bay or Hyatt Newport Beach as great family options usually with my Globalist upgrade makes it a great reward.

    That said would love...

    I’m almost a Lifetime Globalist 2x qualifier - quite the dedication to the Hyatt brand for sure. I often consider staycations or some of the newer brands what have a cat 4 scoring.

    While it is nice for the family to enjoy an extra night nearby, often find Hyatt Mission Bay or Hyatt Newport Beach as great family options usually with my Globalist upgrade makes it a great reward.

    That said would love to turn that free night in for two suite upgrades as I would use them much more.

  2. MM Guest

    What is the terrace hotel surrounded by trees featured in this post's main image?

  3. Regis Guest

    Hyatt Regency Sonoma Wine Country In Santa Rosa is also a solid C4 property.

  4. Ethan Guest

    While I appreciate the article listing all C4 hotels around the world, I feel like it's missing some nuance and context.
    In many cities, there're better choices than C4 hotels, or C4 hotels have constantly low price that's almost not worth to redeem the Free Night in.
    1. in Europe, Hyatt Regency Paris Étoile is missing. It's probably one of the best travel deal in Paris.
    2. Grand Hyatt Berlin is just...

    While I appreciate the article listing all C4 hotels around the world, I feel like it's missing some nuance and context.
    In many cities, there're better choices than C4 hotels, or C4 hotels have constantly low price that's almost not worth to redeem the Free Night in.
    1. in Europe, Hyatt Regency Paris Étoile is missing. It's probably one of the best travel deal in Paris.
    2. Grand Hyatt Berlin is just okay, and not that better than the Lindner at Ku'damm. Same applies to Andaz Vienna (as a C3)
    3. Hyatt Regency Madrid is hard to snatch an award night on.
    4. Park Hyatt Changsha is hammered for decoration, low floor. The C3 Grand Hyatt usually commend higher price, and has a very nice Grand club with free flow fresh juice and local milk tea, and a sensational happy hour spread.
    5. Park Hyatt Suzhou is a great hotel, but the hotel's price is constantly lower than $200, and when it skyrockets during holidays, hotel will block award room inventory. And they're stingy with upgrade. The local C1 Hyatt Regency has way better value and convenient transportation.

    1. Billy B Guest

      But try booking a room at the Hyatt Regency Paris Etoile. Its almost booked 12 months out. No availability for next summer.

      So many of these restaurants are not may be nice, but since there are so few of them around, they get booked well in advance.

  5. Chris_W Diamond

    I get the most value out of a Hyatt property that has the following:

    • A hot tub that's open for guests to use (surprisingly, increasingly difficult to find)

    • Central-style air in the rooms (i.e. not those cheap, noisy, plastic wall-mounted air units)

    • Guaranteed late checkout for elites (so, not a resort or casino property)

    Bonus if it's a full-service property with a proper on-site bar/restaurant - though as long as there's at...

    I get the most value out of a Hyatt property that has the following:

    • A hot tub that's open for guests to use (surprisingly, increasingly difficult to find)

    • Central-style air in the rooms (i.e. not those cheap, noisy, plastic wall-mounted air units)

    • Guaranteed late checkout for elites (so, not a resort or casino property)

    Bonus if it's a full-service property with a proper on-site bar/restaurant - though as long as there's at least a Hyatt Place-style bar with at least *some* foodservice, that's good enough.

    So in that spirit, here's a list of category 1-4 Hyatts in the US and Canada *complete to the best of my knowledge* that meet those criteria. Hope others find this helpful for redeeming those awards!

    Note that while the list may appear long, if you look at these on a map, you notice a glaring lack of options in middle America, with almost all of them concentrated around the northeast coast, Florida, eastern Texas, the Rocky Mountains (CO/UT), and the west coast (mostly California). (Case in point: while there are hotels in both Tampa and Chicago, there's not a single option along the 17-hour drive between them!)

    Without further ado, the list:

    Cat 1-4 full-service with indoor hot tub:
    • Hyatt Regency Lisle Near Naperville - cat 1
    • Hyatt Centric Chicago Magnificent Mile - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Green Bay - cat 2
    • Hyatt Regency Denver at Colorado Convention Center - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Lake Washington at Seattle's Southport - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency Dulles - cat 2
    • Hyatt Regency Reston - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency New Brunswick - cat 2
    • Hyatt Regency Greenwich - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency Long Island - cat 2
    • Hyatt Regency Coralville Hotel & Conference Center - cat 2
    • The Elms Hotel & Spa - cat 4 (note: has outdoor hot tub as well)
    • Hyatt Regency Wichita - cat 1
    • Hyatt Regency Calgary - cat 3
    • Hyatt Lodge Oak Brook Chicago - cat 2

    Cat 1-4 full-service with outdoor hot tub where the weather's warm enough (more-or-less) year-round:
    • Grand Hyatt Tampa Bay - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency Sarasota - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Coral Gables - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Houston West - cat 1
    • Hyatt Regency Austin - cat 4
    • Tempe Mission Palms - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency Phoenix - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency San Francisco Airport - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency La Jolla at Aventine - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Newport Beach - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Newport Beach West - cat 3 (formerly "Hyatt Regency John Wayne Airport, Newport Beach")
    • Hyatt Regency Orange County - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Long Beach - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Westlake - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Valencia - cat 3
    • Hyatt Regency Santa Clara - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Sonoma Wine Country - cat 4
    • Hyatt Regency Sacramento - cat 3
    • Hyatt Palm Springs - cat 3
    • Hyatt Centric Santa Clara Silicon Valley - cat 4
    • Hyatt Centric Fisherman's Wharf San Francisco - cat 4

    Cat 1-4 full-service with outdoor hot tub, seasonal and/or sometimes too cold in winter:
    • Hyatt Regency Birmingham - The Wynfrey Hotel - cat 2
    • The Elms Hotel & Spa - cat 4 (note: has indoor hot tub as well)
    • Hyatt Regency Vancouver - cat 4

    Cat 1-4 Hyatt Place/House with central-style air and indoor hot tub:
    • Hyatt House Hartford North/Windsor - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Fishkill/Poughkeepsie - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Shelton - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Philadelphia/King of Prussia - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Buffalo/Amherst - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Canton - cat 1
    • Hyatt House Rochester / Mayo Clinic Area - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Minneapolis/Downtown - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place Altoona / Des Moines - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Denver Airport - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Boulder/Pearl Street - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place Colorado Springs / Downtown - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Salt Lake City/Farmington/Station Park - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place Eugene / Oakway Center - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Seattle/Redmond - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Seattle/Bellevue - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Winnipeg-South/Outlet Collection - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Anchorage-Midtown - cat 4

    Cat 1-4 Hyatt Place/House with central-style air and outdoor hot tub where the weather's warm enough (more-or-less) year-round:
    • Hyatt Place Sarasota / Lakewood Ranch - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Orlando/Lake Buena Vista - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Daytona Beach - Oceanfront - cat 3 (NOTE: as of 10/2024, pool/hot tub area closed for construction, according to a notice on Hyatt's website; should reopen eventually)
    • Hyatt House Miami Airport - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place Delray Beach - cat 4
    • Hyatt Place Biloxi - cat 3
    • Hyatt House The Woodlands / Shenandoah - cat 1
    • Hyatt Place Phoenix/Chandler-Fashion Center - cat 2
    • Hyatt House San Ramon - cat 3
    • Hyatt House LA - University Medical Center - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Scottsdale/Old Town - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Cypress/Anaheim - cat 3
    • Hyatt House at Anaheim Resort/Convention Center - cat 4
    • Hyatt Place at Anaheim Resort/Convention Center - cat 4
    • Hyatt House Pleasanton - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Pleasant Hill - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Emeryville/San Francisco Bay Area - cat 3
    • Hyatt House LAX / Century Blvd - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place LAX / Century Blvd - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place Los Angeles/LAX/El Segundo - cat 3
    • Hyatt House San Diego/Sorrento Mesa - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Santa Clara - cat 4

    Cat 1-4 Hyatt Place/House with central-style air and outdoor hot tub, seasonal and/or sometimes too cold in winter:
    • Hyatt House Boston/Burlington - cat 3
    • Hyatt House White Plains - cat 4
    • Hyatt House Branchburg / Bridgewater - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Philadelphia/Plymouth Meeting - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Richmond / Short Pump - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Park City - cat 4
    • Hyatt Place Salt Lake City/Lehi - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Salt Lake City/Downtown - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Salt Lake City/Sandy - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Salt Lake City/Cottonwood - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Provo - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Provo / Pleasant Grove - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place Boise/Downtown - cat 2
    • Hyatt Place St. George / Convention Center - cat 3
    • Hyatt Place Las Vegas at Silverton Village - cat 3
    • Hyatt House Denver Tech Center - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Dallas/Uptown - cat 2
    • Hyatt House Dallas/Las Colinas - cat 1
    • Hyatt House Dallas/Addison - cat 1
    • Hyatt House Dallas/Lincoln Park - cat 1

    1. Andrew Diamond

      Holy snap that might be the longest comment ever. Thank you for sharing!

  6. Pam Guest

    Ben you have intl down bit really need help on donestic uses!

  7. Kaneesha Johnson Washington Guest

    Not much in US, specially California!

  8. MPS in Charlotte Diamond

    “ I think sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking of hotel points and free night certificates exclusively in terms of aspirational, bucket list destinations…. there’s something to be said for practical, useful redemptions as well.”

    Sound advice which applies to airline miles as well. I know there’s an audience on this site that consistently reaches for the most aspirational redemptions almost out of necessity (“I’ll fly whatever dates are available with two overnight...

    “ I think sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking of hotel points and free night certificates exclusively in terms of aspirational, bucket list destinations…. there’s something to be said for practical, useful redemptions as well.”

    Sound advice which applies to airline miles as well. I know there’s an audience on this site that consistently reaches for the most aspirational redemptions almost out of necessity (“I’ll fly whatever dates are available with two overnight layovers on three different airlines because I can’t afford it any other way”), and I respect that.

    For my circumstances, time is the more valuable commodity. As such, I typically pay for my overseas trips in cash (or occasionally credit card points directly without transferring to airline programs) because I have fixed vacation dates and have neither the time or inclination to investigate sweet spot redemptions.

    As a result, I’ve found my best use of airline miles and hotel points to be for unexpected or short notice trips within North America (family gatherings, sick relatives, funerals, etc.), where the cash price is undesirably high but points redemptions are still available.

  9. Christian Guest

    "I think sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking of hotel points and free night certificates exclusively in terms of aspirational, bucket list destinations."

    Don't you see some ummm... inconsistency with you clearly specifying that you don't do economy flight reviews because this is a blog about aspirational travel then saying the above? Didn't you just spend a grand a night to stay in some mega-ritzy French ski hotel?

  10. MidSouthSkier Community Ambassador

    Most often I use them for airport hotels in the US as I often need a 1-night stay and usually have no issues finding a cat 1-4.

    But this year I used it at the Story Hotel Studio Malmö, Sweden. It's only a cat 1 but the refundable rate was $259 for the nights we stayed. Got 2 rooms for 2 nights for just 1 cert + 15K points total. Includes rooftop breakfast.

    1. Cbchicago Guest

      I stayed there in August for three nights too. I really enjoyed it and want to go back.

  11. Christian Guest

    We used our certificates at the Hyatt Regency Kotor Bay Montenegro and thought it was well worth it.

  12. Rico Gold

    Hyatt Regency Vancouver BC is a good cat 4 redemption.

  13. Santos Guest

    Regency Toronto is in a great location if not a little worn around the edges. Cat 4; we used a FNC right during TIFF even.

  14. Portlanjuanero Member

    I almost want to gatekeep these but: 1) Hyatt Place LIC is the last cat 4 in NYC proper 2) Hyatt Regency Seattle is one of the nicest HR's in the US and usually hovers around $400 a night and 3) Hyatt Regency Hesperia in Madrid (which is mentioned above) saves me hundreds of Euros when visiting friends.

    PH Jakarta is also incredible but no one should go to Jakarta without very very good reason.

    1. François Guest

      Yep, agreed about Hyatt Place LIC. Been using my free nights there for years.

  15. darkrider New Member

    These cat 1-4 are nice to have to on the off chance there is one in an area you might visit. But they cannot be used consistently at all. Hyatt would have to change it to 1-5 to really know there is a hotel you’d like to stay at in whatever city your travels take you

    1. Dusty Guest

      I disagree. If it's a big city, unless you're looking at NYC, there's probably a cat4 hotel where you can use a cert. If it's not a big city, there's either no Hyatt at all or the Hyatt is a cat4 or lower. I've never had a problem using mine, even within the US.

  16. Kevin Guest

    +1 For Regency Lisbon. While not in the downtown area it is right on a main Tram line. I have basic status and they gave me a suite with a full kitchen and a washer/dryer. Plus there is a great rooftop bar.

  17. Andrew Diamond

    Clearly the sentiments on yesterday's article didn't land where you expected. Agreed that if you're just looking at the price of a property, this isn't too bad. Just not what if waste a CC sign up on.

    Despite a few gems out there, Hyatt does make it as hard as possible to redeem value from these certificates. We are about 4 months from our next "oops 75% of the properties we changed went up a category" announcement from them.

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

Andrew Diamond

Clearly the sentiments on yesterday's article didn't land where you expected. Agreed that if you're just looking at the price of a property, this isn't too bad. Just not what if waste a CC sign up on. Despite a few gems out there, Hyatt does make it as hard as possible to redeem value from these certificates. We are about 4 months from our next "oops 75% of the properties we changed went up a category" announcement from them.

4
Andrew Diamond

Holy snap that might be the longest comment ever. Thank you for sharing!

1
Christian Guest

"I think sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking of hotel points and free night certificates exclusively in terms of aspirational, bucket list destinations." Don't you see some ummm... inconsistency with you <i>clearly</i> specifying that you don't do economy flight reviews because this is a blog about aspirational travel then saying the above? Didn't you just spend a grand a night to stay in some mega-ritzy French ski hotel?

1
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