Two of Hyatt's Most Prestigious Brands Are Trying All-Inclusive for the First Time

Two of Hyatt's Most Prestigious Brands Are Trying All-Inclusive for the First Time

Park Hyatt and Grand Hyatt, names built on a la carte luxury, are both going all-inclusive in Mexico before the year is out.

By Resort Flock Staff·Jul 11, 2026·Updated Jul 11, 2026

Hyatt is taking two of its most rarefied nameplates into territory neither has entered before. The company and owner Parks Hospitality Holdings confirmed that Park Hyatt Riviera Maya and Grand Hyatt Los Cabos will both open in the second half of 2026 as all-inclusive resorts, a first for brands better known for a la carte fine dining and pay-as-you-go service.

The bet is that Hyatt's all-inclusive machinery, honed through its Inclusive Collection, can carry brands this prestigious without diluting them. Both properties sit in Mexico, on opposite coasts.

Park Hyatt Riviera Maya is slated to open by the end of the year on a secluded stretch of Caribbean coast between Cancun and Puerto Morelos, inside a private enclave called AMAI reached through mangrove. It will hold just 148 rooms and suites, some with private pools, plus a 2,300-square-foot penthouse. Each guest gets a dedicated Resort Ambassador, and the culinary program runs to seven venues, all served a la carte, anchored by refined Mexican cuisine and a cocktail bar called The Botanist. Guests get preferred access to the El Tinto golf course in the Riviera Maya.

Grand Hyatt Los Cabos, expected slightly earlier, sits within the Oleada oceanfront community near Cabo San Lucas. It is the larger of the two at 301 rooms, including 42 swim-out rooms and a 4,602-square-foot Presidential Suite, with more than 20,000 square feet of event space, five restaurants, five bars, an 18-hole Ernie Els golf course and a spa built around a traditional temazcal ritual.

The pair follows recent Hyatt debuts in Los Cabos and Mayakoba, part of a steady push to stretch the company's luxury brands across Mexico's leisure market.