Do Families Really Need Hotel Status? (Here's What Works Better in 2026)

award travel credit card hilton hyatt mariott May 09, 2026

Photo Credit: Maria Fung | Ritz Carlton Kyoto, Japan

Let me start with something that happened recently.

Someone in the conference asked me: "Maria, I'm trying to figure out if I should chase Hyatt Globalist status this year. My friend says it's the only way to get upgrades and free breakfast. What do you think?"

I sat with that for a second. Because here's the truth. The advice her friend gave her? It was probably good advice... three or four years ago.

In 2026? I'd push back on it. 

Not because hotel status has zero value. It still does. But for most families especially families like yours, traveling once or twice a year to Asia, working around school breaks, trying to get 3, 4, 5 seats together, the way hotel perks work has quietly changed. And I don't think enough people are talking about it.

So let's talk about it.

First, What Is Hotel Status Anyway?

Quick explanation, because I know not everyone is at the same level here. Hotel loyalty programs work like airline miles programs. You stay at hotels in their network, you earn points, and after enough nights you hit a "tier": Silver, Gold, Platinum, whatever they call it.

The top tiers status like Hyatt Globalist, Marriott Titanium, Hilton Diamond used to be really hard to get. You'd need 50, 60, even 75 qualifying nights a year. That's a lot of hotel stays. In exchange, the hotel would take care of you with free breakfast, a nicer room and late checkout when you have four kids who can't be rushed. Sometimes even a suite upgrade.

For business travelers who live in hotels? Worth it. For families like ours who take 1 ~ 2 trips a year? Hmm. That's where it gets complicated.

Photo Credit: Maria
Fung | Because of the Hyatt Globalist status, we were offered complementary breakfast as globalist when we stayed in Park Hyatt Auckland. Breakfast has becomes a reason for the hotel choices.

Here's What's Changed And Why It Matters For You

Three things have shifted. All of them are happening right now.

1]Hotel status isn't as exclusive as it used to be.

These big hotel groups like Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt and IHG, have grown a lot. This means more brands, more properties and more members getting elite status through shortcuts, including credit card benefits.

When everyone has elite status, it stops meaning as much to the hotel. They can't upgrade everyone. They can't give everyone the lounge access. So what ends up happening? They stick to the minimum what's written in the fine print, and not much more. The "wow" factor of hotel status has gotten quieter.

Photo Credit : Maria Fung. When traveling with kids, complimentary breakfast becomes a great benefit to enjoy the family time and bring the travel cost down. Here is at Hilton Tokyo Bay.

2]Status keeps you loyal to one brand even when it's not the best choice.

This is the one I feel most strongly about. If you're chasing Hyatt Globalist, you end up picking Hyatt properties only even if the Marriott and Hilton have a better location in Osaka or Kyoto, or the independent boutique hotel in Kyoto is twice as special. The trend shows families look for enhanced stay and experience.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung. An individual hotel experience and their local cuisines in Kyoto was the highlight of our family trip in Japan in one of the winter breaks. Here at Shiraume, Kyoto.

For families who travel to Asia Pacific, this matters a lot. Asia has incredible hotels that aren't part of any loyalty program. Some of the best family experiences come from having the freedom to choose. When you're stuck chasing nights in one brand's world, you give that freedom up.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung - Hotel status did give us extra perks in the international hotel chain when it came to birthday, wedding anniversary, etc.

3]Your credit card is now giving you what hotel status used to give you.

This is the part I really want you to hear. Some premium credit cards now come with hotel booking platforms. Amex has Fine Hotels + Resorts, Chase has something called The Edit. When you book through these platforms, you get:

  • Free breakfast for two 
  • Room upgrades when available
  • Late checkout guaranteed so you're not scrambling at 11am
  • A property credit (usually $100 ~ $125) to spend at the hotel

Photo Credit: Maria
Fung

Photo Credit: Maria Fung | AMEX FHR porgram offers the same and (smetimes better) benefits and perks than the hotel elite members.

Does it sound familiar? It should. That's basically what hotel status gives you. Except these benefits work across hundreds of hotels, not just one brand. So you get the perks AND you keep your freedom to choose.

Think about it this way: hotel status locks you into one hotel's world. The right credit card opens up a much bigger world and still takes care of you when you get there.

So Which Cards Are Actually Worth It For Families?

Photo Credit: Maria
Fung | Park Hyatt Niseko, Japan - The dining credit offered by AMEX FHR program enhance the overall stay experience.

I'm not going to give you a list of 20 cards. That's overwhelming and not helpful. Here are the three that I genuinely think move the needle for families traveling to Asia Pacific.

Chase Sapphire Reserve [Limited-Time Offer of 150,000 points]

What you get: $500 per year in The Edit hotel booking credits ($250 credit twice per year), and The Edit booking perks (breakfast, upgrade, $100 hotel credit and late checkout). Also gives you $300 in general travel credits. Use this tool to help you find the Edit and Select Hotels >> [ AwardHelper]

Why this matters for your family: If your family does one or two premium hotel stays a year and you want the VIP feeling without being tied to one hotel brand, The Edit credits are a genuinely useful benefit. When you add up all the credits, the math usually works in your favor.

Amex Platinum

What you get: Access to Fine Hotels + Resorts, that's complimentary breakfast, room upgrade, $100 hotel credit (credit type may vary) and 4pm checkout. Also includes automatic Hilton Honors Gold status which gives you complimentary breakfast outside of United States.

Why this matters for your family: If you're going to Asia or Europe and want hotel stays that feel taken care of without pledging loyalty to Hilton, Fine Hotels + Resorts is one of the best ways in. One family stay where breakfast is covered can easily justify a big chunk of the annual fee.

Amex Hilton Honors Aspire

 What you get: $400 per year in resort credits ($200 semi-annually), automatic Hilton Honors Diamond status and an annual free night certificate.

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