World of Hyatt Card: 60K Bonus Worth $1,200+ in Free Nights
Chase is offering elevated welcome bonuses on both World of Hyatt credit cards through late February. The question isn’t whether these are good deals—they are. It’s which card fits your spend pattern.
The offers:
- World of Hyatt Credit Card: 60,000 points after $3,000 spend in 3 months, plus 30,000 more points after an additional $6,000 spend (90,000 total). $95 annual fee.
- World of Hyatt Business Credit Card: Same 60,000-point bonus structure, same spend requirements, same $95 fee.
Both include 5 qualifying night credits that push you toward elite status faster.
Why this matters:
Hyatt points consistently deliver the best redemption value among hotel programs. That 60,000-point bonus translates to:
– 10 free nights at Category 1 hotels (6,000 points each)
– 4 free nights at Category 4 properties (15,000 points each)
– 2+ nights at higher-tier properties
At current cash rates, you’re looking at $1,200-2,000+ in hotel value from the initial bonus alone.
The annual perks:
Both cards include a free night certificate annually (worth up to 15,000 points) that covers properties like Hyatt Place, Hyatt House, and many Hyatt Regency locations. That alone justifies the $95 fee at typical rates.
You also get:
– Automatic Discoverist status (10% points bonus, late checkout)
– 2x-4x points earning structure on eligible purchases
– No foreign transaction fees
The 5 bonus night credits are particularly valuable—you need just 25 more nights to hit Globalist status if you’re starting from scratch.
Personal vs. business decision:
The personal card makes sense if you can’t substantiate business spend to Chase or want the simplest path to a new card.
The business version is identical except it won’t appear on your personal credit report (though Chase still pulls personal credit for approval). If you have a legitimate business or side income, this preserves a 5/24 slot.
Getting both? Chase typically allows this if you space applications 2-3 months apart, though you’ll only receive one welcome bonus per product type.
The catch:
The extended 90,000-point offer requires $9,000 total spend. For most people, the initial 60,000 points at $3,000 spend delivers better value per dollar of manufactured activity.
That said, if you have legitimate spending coming up, the additional 30,000 points costs just $6,000 more—a reasonable 0.5 cents per point of “cost.”
Our Take:
- The bottom line: This is one of the few hotel cards worth holding long-term, elevated bonus or not. The free night certificate consistently covers rooms costing $150-300, making the $95 fee a bargain.
- Smart move: Take the 60,000-point bonus, use it for 3-4 nights at a Category 4 property during peak season, and reassess whether the additional spend makes sense for your situation.
- Watch out for: Chase’s 5/24 rule. If you’re under that threshold, consider whether burning a slot on a hotel card makes sense versus waiting for a premium Chase card offer.