Hyatt Select Lands in Berlin. The Conversion Math Is the Story Nobody's Running.
Hyatt's first international Hyatt Select property is a 140-room conversion in Berlin opening in 2028, and the brand is betting that "streamlined amenities" will win over European owners skeptical of American flag economics. Whether that bet pays off depends entirely on a number most franchise sales teams would rather you didn't calculate.
Let me tell you what caught my eye about this announcement, and it wasn't the renderings.
Hyatt just confirmed its first Hyatt Select property outside the U.S... a 140-key conversion in Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg neighborhood, slated for 2028. And if you're an owner in Europe who's been getting pitched by every American flag chasing EMEA growth, this is the moment to pull out your calculator and start asking questions the franchise sales team is hoping you won't. Because Hyatt Select is a conversion-friendly, upper-midscale brand built on "streamlined amenities for short-stay travelers," and that language is doing a LOT of heavy lifting. Streamlined is a beautiful word. It means different things depending on which side of the franchise agreement you're sitting on. For the brand, it means lower development costs and faster pipeline growth (Hyatt reported a record pipeline of approximately 148,000 rooms globally, and Essentials and Classics brands make up over half of planned EMEA development). For the owner, "streamlined" had better mean lower operating costs that actually flow through to NOI... and that's where the conversation gets interesting, because conversion-friendly brands have a way of promising simplicity in the sales deck and delivering complexity in the standards manual.
Here's what I want every owner being courted by this brand (or any conversion brand expanding internationally) to understand: the total cost of flagging isn't the franchise fee. It's the franchise fee plus the PIP capital to meet brand standards, plus loyalty program assessments, plus reservation system fees, plus marketing contributions, plus the rate parity restrictions that limit your ability to compete on your own terms. I've read hundreds of FDDs over the years. The variance between what franchise sales teams project for loyalty contribution and what actually materializes three years later should be criminal. A brand VP once told me "the owners will adjust." I asked how many owners he'd spoken to. The silence was informative. For a 140-key select-service conversion in a market like Berlin... where independent hotels already compete effectively and where European travelers don't carry the same brand loyalty reflexes as American road warriors... the question isn't whether Hyatt Select is a nice brand. The question is whether the revenue premium justifies the total brand cost as a percentage of revenue. If that number exceeds 15-18% and the loyalty contribution lands at 22% instead of the projected 35-40% (and yes, I've watched exactly that gap destroy a family's hotel), the math breaks. And nobody at headquarters has to sit across the table from you when it does.
The broader context here matters too. Hyatt is aggressively pursuing an asset-light strategy... targeting 90% of 2026 earnings from management and franchise fees, including a $2 billion sale of 14 hotels from its Playa portfolio. That's the company telling you, in the clearest possible financial language, that it wants to collect fees, not hold real estate risk. Which is fine. That's a legitimate business model. But when the entity selling you the flag has explicitly structured itself to NOT share your downside, you need to be very clear-eyed about what "partnership" actually means. It means you own the building, you carry the debt, you fund the PIP, and they collect fees whether your RevPAR index beats comp set or not. (This is the part where I'd normally smile and say something about alignment of incentives, except there's nothing to smile about when the incentives aren't aligned.)
Now, could Hyatt Select work beautifully in Berlin? Absolutely. Prenzlauer Berg is a strong neighborhood, the 140-key size is manageable, and if the conversion standards are genuinely light (genuinely, not "light compared to a full-service PIP that would cost you $4M"), then the economics could pencil. I'm not anti-brand. I'm anti-fantasy. The difference between a brand that works and a brand that destroys equity is almost always in the gap between the sales projection and the actual performance three years in. So if you're an owner being pitched Hyatt Select or any conversion flag expanding into new markets right now, do one thing before you sign anything: ask for actual loyalty contribution data from existing Hyatt Select properties in the U.S. Not projections. Actuals. Trailing twelve months. By comp set. And if they won't give it to you... well, that tells you everything the press release left out.
Here's what I'd say to any owner or operator evaluating a conversion flag right now, whether it's Hyatt Select or anyone else expanding internationally. Pull the total brand cost calculation before the second meeting. Not just the franchise percentage... add loyalty assessments, reservation fees, marketing fund contributions, PIP capital (amortized over the agreement term), and any mandated vendor costs. Express it as a percentage of total revenue. If that number is north of 15% and the brand can't show you verified loyalty contribution data (not projections... actuals from comparable properties), you're buying a promise without a receipt. This is what I call the Brand Reality Gap. Brands sell promises at scale. Properties deliver them shift by shift. And in a market like Berlin, where independent hotels compete effectively and leisure travelers don't default to flags the way American business travelers do, the revenue premium has to be real and provable... not a slide in a franchise sales deck. Get the data. Do the math. Then decide.