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Home » The Park Hyatt Tokyo Now Claims It’s A Resort… To Avoid Giving Late Check-Out?
Airways Magazine

The Park Hyatt Tokyo Now Claims It’s A Resort… To Avoid Giving Late Check-Out?

FlyMarshall NewsroomBy FlyMarshall NewsroomApril 5, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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Broadly speaking, we’ve seen a growing number of hotels try to find loopholes in order to avoid having to deliver all elite perks. It’s an area where not all hotel groups are created equal, and Hyatt is generally better than Marriott, for example. Well, here’s a case where a Hyatt property is making a suspicious change…

The Park Hyatt Tokyo is now a resort, not a hotel

The Park Hyatt Tokyo recently reopened, after an extensive renovation, and it’s easily one of the flagship properties in Hyatt’s portfolio. Typically I find Japanese Hyatt properties to be very “by the book” when it comes to delivering elite perks, more broadly reflecting the country’s culture.

However, as reported on FlyerTalk, we’ve just seen a subtle change at the Park Hyatt Tokyo — as of April 2026, the property is being categorized as a resort, rather than as a hotel. Multiple people report being told this by hotel staff. On top of that, it’s even reflected on the hotel’s website — under the “Amenities” section, you’ll now see “Resort Property” listed as one of the features (which wasn’t there a week ago).

The Park Hyatt Tokyo is now a resort, apparently

I’m really scratching my head as to how anyone would consider the Park Hyatt Tokyo to be a resort. Yes, the hotel has a very nice wellness area, but this is otherwise a quintessential city business hotel. It wouldn’t be logical for a defining characteristic of a (non-resort) hotel to be its lack of a nice pool and gym.

The Park Hyatt Tokyo is now a resort?!

Is this reclassification about elite late check-out?

What incentive is there for a hotel to be classified as a resort rather than as a hotel? The primary difference I can come up with is that World of Hyatt Globalist members get guaranteed 4PM late check-out at hotels, while at resorts, it’s subject to availability.

In the days since this policy change has been implemented, it seems like the hotel has already started using this to its advantage, to deny late check-out on capacity grounds.

I am curious, did the hotel just have a major issue with the late check-out benefit causing problems? I can imagine this hotel gets a very high percentage of Globalist guests, and I also imagine lots of guests want to stretch their stay as long as possible, and may utilize the late check-out.

If this happens often enough, I can imagine it’s hard to manage expectations when you have to offer people a check-out time that’s potentially after the check-in time for the same room.

Regardless, I’m not a fan of hotels trying to skirt the rules in this way, and I hope this isn’t the start of a larger trend…

This reclassification seems like a stretch

Bottom line

The Park Hyatt Tokyo has started classifying itself as a resort rather than a hotel. While the property has a nice wellness area, I can’t imagine any reasonable definition by which that’s logical. I suspect that this change is being made due to concerns over the elite late check-out benefit… at least it’s the only explanation I can come up with.

What do you make of the Park Hyatt Tokyo’s resort transformation? 😉

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FlyMarshall Newsroom
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