TL;DR: Chase's record 80,000-point World of Hyatt Business welcome bonus expired at 9 a.m. ET on April 30, 2026. The current offer reverted to 60,000 points after $5,000 spend in three months, the program's long-running baseline.
Chase's elevated welcome offer on the World of Hyatt Business Credit Card, 80,000 points after $10,000 in spend during the first three months, expired at 9 a.m. Eastern on April 30, 2026, according to the application page archived by Upgraded Points and confirmed against Chase's live landing page on May 1. The card has since reverted to its longstanding baseline: 60,000 points after $5,000 in purchases in the first three months from account opening.
The 80K offer ran for roughly four months and was the highest welcome bonus in the card's history, surpassing the 75,000-point offers Chase had cycled through previous years. Tracking from Upgraded Points puts the card's typical rotation between two structures: 60,000 points after $5,000 (where it sits now) and 75,000 points after $7,500. The 80K/$10K tier was the outlier.
What the Current Offer Looks Like
The terms applicants face today, per Chase's current World of Hyatt Business application page:
- 60,000 World of Hyatt points after $5,000 in purchases within three months of account opening
- $199 annual fee, not waived the first year
- Automatic World of Hyatt Discoverist elite status while the account is open
- 5 elite-qualifying night credits per calendar year, plus 2 additional credits for every $10,000 spent
- Two $50 statement credits per anniversary year for Hyatt purchases (effectively a $100 offset against the annual fee)
At our 1.7 cents per point valuation, 60,000 World of Hyatt points are worth roughly $1,020 in hotel value, which still puts the card's welcome bonus among the strongest in the hotel category by points-to-spend ratio. The math is straightforward: $5,000 of spend earns enough points for four nights at a Category 4 property pricing at Standard tier (15,000 points each).
Why the 80K Offer Mattered, and Why It Ended When It Did
The 80K offer launched in late December 2025 alongside a similar elevated promotion on the personal World of Hyatt Credit Card. Chase did not publicly explain the timing, but two factors point at the why: the May 20, 2026 award chart transition Hyatt had announced in February, and the broader hotel-loyalty competitive pressure from Marriott's and Hilton's recurring elevated bonuses through Q1 2026.
The chart transition matters because it changed how much a Hyatt point will be worth from May 20 onward. The award chart introduced two new tiers (Lowest and Top) on top of the existing three, with Top-tier nights at Category 8 properties pricing at 75,000 points versus the prior peak of 45,000. We covered the strategic implications in the Hyatt points devaluation 2026 strategy guide and the property-by-property changes in the World of Hyatt award chart news post.
The practical read on the offer expiration: Chase ran the highest bonus in the card's history immediately before a program devaluation that, on its face, made each Hyatt point buy less. The 80K offer, in retrospect, was the program's last big push at pre-devaluation point pricing.
What This Means for People Who Got In Before April 30
If you applied for and were approved on the 80K offer before it ended, the spending clock runs from account opening, and the points will post within six to eight weeks of meeting the $10,000 spend threshold. Three planning notes from our Hyatt devaluation strategy post apply:
- Award bookings made before 9 a.m. EDT on May 20, 2026 price under the current three-tier chart, regardless of stay date. If your 80K points post in time, book aspirational Category 7 and 8 Park Hyatt properties before the May 20 cutoff to lock in 45,000-point peak pricing instead of the new 75,000-point Top tier.
- Don't pre-transfer Chase Ultimate Rewards into Hyatt speculatively. Confirm award space, then transfer, then book within the hour.
- Save the card's annual Category 1-4 free night certificate for Top-tier nights at Category 4 properties (now worth up to 25,000 points per cert) rather than Lowest-tier stays.
Where the 60K Offer Sits in the Current Hotel Card Landscape
For anyone evaluating the World of Hyatt Business Credit Card now that the elevated bonus has lapsed, the relevant peer set in May 2026:
- Marriott Bonvoy Business. 5 free nights (each worth up to 50,000 points) after $7,500 in spend. Marriott points run roughly 0.8 cents each, putting the bonus value in the $1,800–2,000 range at a higher spend threshold.
- IHG One Rewards Premier Business. 175,000 points after $4,000 in spend through Q2 2026, per IHG's current application page. At 0.5–0.7 cents per point, that's $875–1,225 in value.
- Hilton Honors Business. 175,000 points after $8,000 in spend. Hilton points value sits near 0.5 cents, so the bonus is worth roughly $875.
The Hyatt offer still wins on points-to-spend ratio because Hyatt points carry the highest per-point value in major hotel programs. The 60K/$5K offer earns about $1,020 in projected value for the lowest spend requirement on the list. Property footprint is the trade-off: Hyatt operates roughly 1,400 properties versus Marriott's 9,000.
When to Wait, When to Apply
Historical patterns suggest Chase will rotate this card back to a 75,000-point offer at $7,500 in spend at some point in 2026. That's the second of the two recurring structures Upgraded Points has tracked since 2021. The 80,000-point offer is unlikely to return in the near term given how recently it ran.
If you're a business owner who would naturally spend $5,000 in three months and Hyatt fits your travel pattern, the current 60K offer is a clean entry point. If your spend would only clear $7,500 with effort, the wait-for-75K play is reasonable. If you can clear $10,000 comfortably and Chase brings back an 80K offer, that one is worth circling on the calendar.
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