Hyatt's 148,000-Room Pipeline Is Impressive. The Math Behind It Is What Matters.
Hyatt is celebrating a record development pipeline and rolling out new brands like they're launching apps. But if you're the owner signing the franchise agreement, the celebration looks a little different from your side of the table.
I sat in an ownership meeting about six years ago where the brand rep put up a slide that said "pipeline momentum" in letters big enough to read from the parking lot. The owner next to me leaned over and whispered, "Momentum for who?" I think about that guy every time I see a pipeline number.
Hyatt just posted a record 148,000 rooms in the development pipeline. That's roughly 40% of their entire existing room base waiting to come online. Net room growth hit 7.3% in 2025 (excluding acquisitions), U.S. signings were up 30% year over year, and their "Essentials Portfolio"... Hyatt Studios, Hyatt Select, Unscripted... accounted for over 65% of new U.S. deals. The loyalty program crossed 63 million members. RevPAR grew 4% in Q4. Adjusted EBITDA hit $292 million for the quarter, up almost 15%. On paper, this is a company firing on all cylinders. And to Hyatt's credit, the numbers are real. They're executing.
But here's what nobody's telling you. When over 80% of the U.S. pipeline is new-build and half those deals are in markets where Hyatt has never operated before... that's not just growth. That's a bet. A big one. On markets that don't have existing demand generators for Hyatt loyalty members. On owners who are building from the ground up with construction costs that have jumped 15-20% in the last three years. On the assumption that 63 million loyalty members will follow the flag into secondary and tertiary markets where they've never stayed at a Hyatt before. Maybe they will. But I've seen this movie before, with different studio logos, and the third act doesn't always match the trailer. The brands that grew fastest into new markets in the 2015-2019 cycle were also the ones where owners complained loudest about loyalty delivery by 2022.
The Essentials play is smart in theory. Lower cost to build, lower cost to operate, entry-level price point for the World of Hyatt system. Hyatt Studios is their extended-stay answer. Hyatt Select is the select-service play. These are categories where other companies have printed money... if you're Hilton with Home2 or Marriott with Element, you've proven the model. But Hyatt is late to this party. They're launching these brands into a market that already has mature competitors with established owner confidence, established loyalty contribution data, and established supply. Being late means your pitch has to be better. And "better" means one thing to the owner sitting across the table: show me the actual loyalty contribution, not a projection. Show me what your existing hotels in similar markets actually deliver. Because projections are the most dangerous document in franchising.
And then there's the leadership shift. Thomas Pritzker stepped down as Executive Chairman in February after 22 years. Hoplamazian now holds both the Chairman and CEO title. Consolidating power at the top during an aggressive growth phase isn't unusual... but it changes the accountability structure. When you have a Pritzker family member in the Chairman seat, there's a specific kind of institutional gravity that affects decision-making. When the CEO holds both titles, the board dynamic shifts. For owners, this probably doesn't matter day to day. For the strategic direction of the company over the next five years... it matters a lot. Pay attention to whether the growth targets accelerate or moderate in the next two earnings calls. That'll tell you which instinct is winning internally: the operator's caution or the growth engine's appetite.
If you're an owner being pitched one of Hyatt's new Essentials brands for a new-build deal, do one thing before you sign: ask for actual loyalty contribution data from existing comparable properties, not projections. Get the trailing 12-month number from three to five operating hotels in similar markets and similar ADR ranges. If they can't produce it because the brand is too new... that's your answer. You're the test case, and test cases take the risk. Price your deal accordingly. And if you're an existing Hyatt franchisee in a market where one of these new flags is coming in at a lower price point... call your brand rep this week and ask specifically how they're protecting your rate integrity. Don't wait for the competitive impact to show up in your STR report.