How do Hyatt treat you as an Elite?

Property: Hyatt Regency Sydney
Status: Globalist
Room booked: 1 King Bed
Room received: Harbour View Studio Suite - "Premium Suite".
Rate: Corporate Rate
Early check in/late out: 4pm late checkout.
  • Despite a lot of cristisms of this property, I'm generally treated fairly well here. Perhaps as this is my most frequently visisted Hyatt these days.
  • Check in pleasant, proactively offered 4pm check out without asking and upgrade was provided.
  • Upgrade was to a high floor, premium suite room in the new wing and facing the harbour. Condition was excellent and I much prefer the bathroom to the Balcony Suite. However, would call the room more of a large corner room then a suite.
  • Lounge is still not open, previously been provided a single drink voucher in lieu of this, but no such provision this time. Breakfast in the restaurant is your typical Australian buffet breakfast.
 
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Property: Andaz Singapore
Status: Globalist
Room booked: 1 King Bed, long term stay rate
Room received: 1 King bed, touted as "city view" so no upgrade at all

I had booked this property for an extended "workation" back when Singapore still had pretty strict entry requirements and the gamble has paid off. I love the Andaz brand from other locations and having lived for many years in Singapore in the past, was super keen to check this one out.

I knew already that management here seems to be extremely stingy when it comes to recognises loyal Hyatt members and unfortunately, my stay was no different. There was no proper room upgrade offered which is a disappointment when staying several weeks. In most cases, this goes the other way round as properties understand you need a bit of extra room when staying away from home but I guess it requires a bit of good will and sophistication with their reservation system as otherwise there's always a chance for some nights being "too full" in the better room types. But this experience was actually made worse by the insistence from staff that I get "graciously upgraded to a city view room"- you can probably see the issue here already! The property is starting on level 25 so there's no such thing as a dumpster view meaning that even the least desirable rooms have a "city view". The good views here would be of the marina and the casino etc. which you can see from the pool deck so offering a base room as an "upgrade" is just treating your most loyal members as idiots which is really something I despise. Just say you're full (or stingy) and then end of story but don't treat me like being stupid.

Now that I got this gripe out of the way, it's time to speak about the good stuff. Almost a shame because this one was one of my best hotel stays in a long time and I'd whole heartedly recommend it but that bad taste about the room type unfortunately stayed with me until the very last day. The hotel itself is amazing and interestingly, staffing problems were mostly absent very unlike many places in the US and Europe at the moment. I'm not sure how they do this in Singapore- I'd guess that the supply of relatively well trained underpaid worker bees in neighbouring countries is such that they can just get them in when needed post pandemic. Staffing generally seemed not the issue here, neither in hospitality or elsewhere.

The hotel is in an interesting area of town which many tourists might be scared away by as it's not right in the heart of the city though I'm not sure what would qualify as such in Singapore anyway- I personally find the former glory of Orchard Road rather run down and beyond its heydays these days and rather tend to avoid it while some of the newer 'downtown areas' are rather sterile and a bit boring in my eyes. the Andaz is essential right underneath Bugis MRT interchange which gives super easy access to the "green" and the newer "blue" MRT line which means everything is essentially just a cheap, fast, clean and dependable ride in air conned bliss away from you. I'm usually not the biggest fan of public transport, believe me, but this has to do with having grown up in places like Singapore and Berlin where you can actually use it. The MRT is one of the best ones out there and incredibly, it keeps getting extended and extended and extended. Just excellent in every respect and the fact that almost everyone politely obeys the rules is a welcome bliss to my often torn German soul. And I'm not talking about overly stringent rules that Singapore has been known for and which mostly are gone these days (yes, you can chew gum- just don't spit it out onto your seat you piggy!) but rather sensible stuff. Like, you know, let people off the train first before boarding, don't destruct public property with ugly graffiti and maybe give up your seat for an elderly person. That "stuff" I mean which should be common curtesy anyway.

Back to the hotel itself- great MRT connection just downstairs and very easy foot access to the Arab quarter and, a bit further, Little India. The former is actually more than just some (excellent) Middle Eastern restaurants and a pretty old Mosque but rather has quite a few funky bars, shops and restaurants which I solidly enjoyed. the Andaz high-rise complex itself has quite a few restaurants too (we enjoyed a lovely Fois Gras Pate at the French restaurant down there as well as a very tasty beef hot pot which I's also recommend though my -very- shaky comprehension of Mandarin was almost essential there) and there's also the older Bugis interchange shopping mall and food court connected via the MRT underneath as well. More than enough food choices to keep you happy even if you end up here in weeks of pouring rain, though I'd of course highly recommend venturing further in any case as Singapore has so much to offer.

My room was on the 36th floor with great views of the "city" which is mostly amazing high rises with odd pockets of "heritage" listed buildings and surprisingly many parks sprinkled in. As I used to live here in this city, for me it was mostly just coming home to one of those many homes I have. The room was a bit on the smaller side but very well appointed and featured both a cool design (modern with little local twists to remind you where you're at- the bathroom door for example was a heavy bright yellow wooden door reminding you of the colourful shop fronts of many of the old heritage buildings around) and a lot of well thought through things that so often go missing in hotels: Just as an example, the rather slippery ultra modern control knob in the shower had a tiny little piece of velcro installed on onside which made it much easier to use. Such a smart little idea which makes it so much easier (I had similar stylish polished shower control in the past elsewhere and they can be so hard to use sometimes). Most impressed though I was with housekeeping: With two or three exceptions in over two weeks, they performed both the daily service and a rather full turndown service without fail. And turndown included full towel refresh, freshening up the bed even and refill of any amenities if needed. As with Andaz generally, you had a daily free mini bar refill with non alcoholic drinks and some snacks (a bag of chips and a Kit Kat bar typically) which is just excellent. And ample bottles of free water, couldn't even drink them all which was greatly appreciated. I also never waited too long for any additional requests (wine glasses, ice bucket, that kind of stuff) and bar two instances came through to guest services on the phone without any long wait. Heck, I even had forgotten that Singapore uses UK electricity plugs (and I really should have remembered that) and I asked if they had any converters and it was no issue at all. One day I was in bad need for an old fashioned calculator (yes, I know, I've been happy with my mobile over the past ten years too but this specific work task was just made so much easier this way) and the front desk staff magically got me one to borrow for the day out of thin air. Staff was generally ranging from excellent and super well trained to a bit clueless but still polite and eager to help and the difference could be easily spotted the colour of shirt they were wearing (hot tip: If you see someone in an orange T-shirt, avoid!).

The greatest benefit of being a Globalist was the instantly up front confirmed late check out (I greatly prefer how Hyatt is handling this compared to Hilton or Marriott- instead of having to beg for your benefit with a random reception clerk, you rather get it proactively offered/ confirmed without any issues in around 95% of properties) and of course the free breakfast buffet which was excellent. You get to choose from not one but three different buffets in very uniquely themed areas of the restaurant so you have all the cold stuff and yoghurts, bakery, milks etc. up front, then you have a separate mini-restaurant with all the "usual" Western hot food and finally an excellent Asian show case with super yummy Laksa, dumplings, fried noodles and so on. I always struggle with seafood in Asia and the staff was great at accomodating this in adjusting the food there. The Laksa was to die for (but still had some fish sauce in I suspect as I didn't feel too well afterwards each time I had it- such is life in Asia for me) and I've been told that all the seafood options were particularly excellent. I can say the same thing about the cold cut and cheese platters in the first room too, nothing was cheap but all high quality Italian or French ingredients, even the butter was a French import. They also had what must be Singapore's most famous breakfast waffles- I'm not a super sweet tooth but all kids around us and my partner could not stop eating them so they must be right down everyone's alley (and came with fresh strawberries and mascarpone cream- that wasn't your typical ordinary breakfast waffles). I probably found the hot Euro food the weakest of it all, scrambled eggs were essentially some yellow egg liquid and pretty much inedible and chicken sausages, well, they're a real sin to humanity anyway in my German mind so let's not go there. Luckily, you could also ask for special egg dishes like daily eggs benedict, omelette and the likes which tasted much better. I don't really care that much but as a warning to anyone from Melbourne- there's not coffee tax but while they offer you a Latte and the likes as if there's a Barrista somewhere, in reality you get machine coffee with a topping of steamed milk so beware!

Finally, the pool was nice (infinity pool on level 25 with Marina/ casino views) but tended to get too crowded in the afternoon which could be easily fixed with a second row of sunloungers- I never understand why you wouldn't add some, there was enough space. The pool was also rather stupidly located so that the building itself draws it shade upon it from the early afternoon onwards which is always something that ticks me off (do architects not think for a moment which direction the sun is coming from when planning something like that?) and there was rather annoying construction work on pool deck itself and in all the neighbouring construction zones which is something you can almost expect generally when in Singapore.

Finally, yet another food recommendation: We decided to have proper Bejing roast duck in the Chinese restaurant of the hotel itself for my birthday (I am talking about the proper fine dining Chinese, not the Asian styled breakfast quarter) and despite me always being hesitant with hotel restaurants, this one was excellent. One of the best ducks I've ever had and we also had Fried rice with Fois Gras there which was an amazing treat. I think you can see a theme there and I must apologise to my childhood friend Donald Duck- your breed is unfortunately way too tasty! :p

All in all, very happy with this hotel, if they just honoured your Hyatt status properly, it would almost be perfect. Strangely after all those days/ weeks and with most staff knowing me in the end, upon check out I wasn't asked how my stay was which I found just plain odd. I didn't really have anything to complain about so I was surprised. And one last tip to finish off: While the MRT is right in the basement so to speak, I would still strongly suggest to take a Grab (Singapore's Uber equivalent) from the airport. It's $18 one way, gets you right to the front door with all your luggage and avoids you having to take the underground maze from the MRT. Especially the green line from the airport is a bit further and while zero issue during the stay, I don't think it's worth it with luggage coming from an international flight- just my personal view.
 
Just adding a few photos of the Andaz in Singapore too :cool:

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My room- rather on the smaller side but well appointed and modern.

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"City views" from my window on level 36. The weird little dots are apparently there to reflect the sun and hence save electricity and the polar bears.

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The pool. Shame it sits in its own shade for most of the afternoon but otherwise a lovely space to chill out.
 
Just adding a few photos of the Andaz in Singapore too :cool:

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My room- rather on the smaller side but well appointed and modern.

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"City views" from my window on level 36. The weird little dots are apparently there to reflect the sun and hence save electricity and the polar bears.

View attachment 286539
The pool. Shame it sits in its own shade for most of the afternoon but otherwise a lovely space to chill out.

The irony being black dots will absorb the heat and radiate it into the room 🤦‍♂️
 
Are you serious? Physics is not my strength I must admit but this just boggles my mind. Ouch! :oops:

White reflects light and black absorbs, so black will got warm. I suspect what it's there for is to prevent sun hitting the room. However, white dots would do a better job but not look as good aesthetically.
 
Property: Hyatt Centric Melbourne
Date: Jul 2022
Status: Globalist
Room booked: 1 King Bed
Room received: Centric Suite
 
Property: Hyatt Regency Brisbane
Date: Aug 2022
Status: Globalist
Room booked: 1 Queen Bed
Room received: Deluxe Suite
 
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I’m exited to hear that the Hyatt in Brissy has renovated up some “suites”- hopefully even with proper King bedding? Those old and run down single beds shoved together weren’t good enough though I otherwise thoroughly enjoyed all my recent stays at this property.

Now- the Centric in Melbourne is a real gem and I always got the same upgrade to a suite. Hands down my favourite property in Australia at the moment and that’s a pretty good call. Actually- all Centrics I’ve stayed in have been excellent. Alongside Andaz, a real star amongst the Hyatt portfolio in my eyes.
 
Status: top tier
Property: Hyatt Regency Sydney
Room booked: regency king
Rate: $286 per night for 3 nights
Received: studio suite; breakfast in the restaurant or via room service; multiple waters.

Property: Hyatt Regency Sydney
Room booked: one regency king and one regency twin with a TSU applied to the king
Rate: $236 for one night plus 30K award for 2 nights for the king; $273 per night for the twin
Received: balcony suite interconnecting with a standard twin; restaurant breakfast for all four guests; 4pm check-out.

Property: Hyatt Regency Perth
Room booked: regency king
Rate: $191 per night for 3 nights.
Received: regency executive suite; handwritten note from the GM; waived 3rd person charge for breakfast; free parking; multiple waters.
 
Status: Globalist
Property: Grand Hyatt Berlin, Germany
Room booked: Standard King
Rate: Euro 269 per night for 3 nights
Received: Standard King with views on highest floor, free mini bar (including beer and chocolate daily), Globalist breakfast and lounge access

We received the dreaded email from the property a few days before which seems to be standard at this hotel. We were basically informed that no suites to upgrade us were available and in exchange we could either get two bottles of wine of free mini bar refills during our stay. We chose the latter but as recurrent guests and globalist members, we were nevertheless disappointed and could not leave the feeling that this is a lazy way to get this pesky status members "off our back".

In fairness, once we had arrived, it became very clear that this hotel simply does not have many rooms that are no standard Kings so it's not one of these properties with endless categories in between to upgrade you. They also had a huge trade fair or similar on and several well off cruise guests too so at least the hotel wasn't entirely empty. A d we just loved the standard King room which is a better layout and has more space than many so-called "Junior suites" in other hotels. We also had a room on the highest floor which had something very rare in this hotel: Actual views- we could see the art gallery, the symphonic theatre, the state library and in the very background the "Goldelse" (Victory column) in the Tiergarten. Not too shabby!

We further enjoyed the pool area under the roof, I had a lovely one hour massage treatment which was fabulous and staff were throughout friendly and efficient. Breakfast was also great though maybe a bit too busy and chaotic for our liking but staff did their best to handle it. We also had access to their "lounge" which at the moment is just a former coffee that has been cordoned off with a rope. But you got drinks, surprisingly elaborate and tasty canapés and friendly staff down there so no complaints from us.

But again, the highlight is probably the rooms and even this standard King room was awesome, the beds plus but comfortable, the heated floors in the bathroom an awesome treat and we also liked that you can enter the bathroom from both the hallway and the bedroom which is very useful. The bathroom amenities (shampoo etc.) were a bit strange in those big bottles just standing on the rim of the bathtub and not even properly installed on the walls but that'a minor niggle.

We have already booked a stay here again next year Summer and am hoping that next time we finally get a little bit of a room upgrade, fingers crossed. But all in all, this property is highly recommended as the right price point/ quality for this city and a great location that let's you walk to both the former West and East centre of town making it super convenient (not to mention several train and metro stations right at your doorstep).
 
Status: top tier
Property: Hyatt Centric Melbourne
Room booked: king
Rate: $286 per night for 3 nights
Received: king suite; breakfast in the restaurant; waived credit card surcharge; multiple waters; typed, personalised welcome note; 4pm late check-out.
 
Status: Globalist
Property: Andaz Munich, Germany
Room booked: Standard King
Rate: 20,000 Points
Received: Standard King

Stayed here for just one night and admittedly booked only the day before. Still- would have expected a bit more of a nice treatment as Globalists who are also repeat guests but no, dispite wide availability for higher room categories on this Sunday night, no upgrade whatsoever. The usual “It’s Oktoberfest” excuse was used which doesn’t really count if the property is only half full.

Generally like this property and the standard rooms are quite generous in size. Comfy bed and everting hip and posh as you’d expect from an Andaz. Breakfast buffet was plentiful and included some nice local specialties like white sausages, pretzels and Obatzder (a rather naughty dip and Bavarian specialty which is seriously made out of cream cheese mixed up with butter and tastes somehow heavenly regardless). Unfortunately no beer with the latter which is really only half the fun ;-)

Biggest negative for me is the location- not ideal for tourists. Too far to walk to the centre and no U or S-train station at the property. Instead you have to take a tram and then change into an underground which we find to be a hassle. No biggie but definitely far from ideal.
 
Status: Globalist
Property: Hyatt Place Frankfurt Airport, Germany
Room booked: Standard King
Rate: Euro 232 per night for 2 nights
Received: Large corner King with airplane views, highest floor

Stayed here for two nights prior to our return back to Australia. Unlike the Hilton or Sheraton, this property is not directly attached to the terminal but rather in a new-ish hotel area off the actual airport (there’s many different brands here). This is not a huge problem anymore as recently a brand new S-train station has opened Just behind the hotel which is just one station from the terminal. Just be aware if you’re carrying lots of luggage- and taxi drivers hate going there as it’s such a short distance and believe me, German (or in most cases, rather Turkish) taxi drivers will not hold back if they hate something so beware!

The hotel itself is one of those cookie cutter motel-like blocks that so many chains have. However, as in most cases, Hyatt does it better than others: The exterior design was very modern yet welcoming. Very quick check in, acknowledged as a Hyatt Globalist and given pretty much the best room in the house. Which is a Hyatt Place means it’s a bit bigger, has a nice sofa lounge and good views (of approaching airplanes in this case which I’m sure I am not the only one enjoying). Importantly, great sound isolation, we didn’t here a sound from the outside. Bathroom was a bit simple but adequate and bed very comfy. We enjoyed the modern decoration that made reference to the local area which was very nicely done.

Breakfast was rather excellent for a hotel of this class and came as full hot and cold breakfast which was of course free for Globalists. The local area is pretty much hotels only and nothing else so when we were hungry the second night, we went to the hotel restaurant for some Currywurst and while overpriced, they tasted excellent- as if you had bought them from a little Currywurst-stand somewhere in Berlin.

All in all very happy with this property though like all hotels at Frankfurt Airport, they charge a bomb for what it is. Worth it when you need the proximity.
 
Status: Globalist
Property: Park Hyatt Bangkok, Thailand
Room booked: Standard King
Rate: About AUD 600 a night
Received: High floor King corner room with amazing views and full Globalist breakfast

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5C98B2F6-50B4-42AF-9938-0517B66D50D2.jpegStayed here on the back from our Europe trip which unfortunately came to an unpleasant ending due to me getting sick. After my time in a Munich hospital, we decided to spoil ourselves with two nights in this expensive property. What an amazing place this was! VERY different to some of the old and rotten Park Hyatt properties elsewhere (Canberra and Hamburg- I am looking at you!), this is a brand new hotel and connected to a shopping plaza. Interior design is just stunning and as Globalists we got upgraded to a better (read: Amazing) room and enjoyed the massive and varied breakfast that included a buffet and a La carte options with variety of both Western and Thai food. It was excellent, as was the service throughout.
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Location is very central and the hotel manages to create an atmosphere of total bliss, a real respite from the hustle and bustle around it. Don’t take this the wrong way- we LOVE the chaos and smells and food and business of Bangkok alongside with it’s gay nightlife which is pretty unique for Asia, all that is why we keep coming back to this amazing city (plus the cheap massages, the shopping, have I mentioned the food?). But once it’s time to retreat to sleep or spend some time by the glorious infinity pool- this hotel feels like heaven.

Will definitely come back and are thinking that this would be the perfect property to apply some suite upgrade awards next time.
 
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I wanted to love this property. Stayed in an Exec Suite shortly after it opened but they didn't soundproof the windows. Even on the highest floors all we could hear was traffic.
 
I wanted to love this property. Stayed in an Exec Suite shortly after it opened but they didn't soundproof the windows. Even on the highest floors all we could hear was traffic.
Are we talking about the same hotel? We didn't hear a peep and I'm a rather light sleeper. Tbh- the hotel rooms are way too high to allow nice from the streets to get up there so I'm rather surprised to hear about your experience. Unless they did something to add sound proofing since you've stayed?
 
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