Hyatt is making a bigger move into luxury all-inclusive travel in Mexico with two high-profile resort openings expected later this year. Park Hyatt Riviera Maya and Grand Hyatt Los Cabos, both owned by Parks Hospitality Holdings, will bring two of Hyatt’s best-known upscale brands into a segment that has become increasingly important for leisure travelers.
The openings are notable because Park Hyatt and Grand Hyatt are not traditionally defined by the all-inclusive model. Hyatt is positioning the resorts as selective extensions of the brands rather than a broad conversion strategy. The goal is to combine the simplicity of an all-inclusive stay with the design, service and sense of place that guests expect from Park Hyatt and Grand Hyatt.
The move also reflects Mexico’s continued strength as a luxury resort market. Riviera Maya and Los Cabos remain two of the country’s most competitive leisure destinations, drawing travelers who want beach settings, high-end dining, wellness, golf, events and easy access from North America.
Park Hyatt Riviera Maya Targets Quiet Luxury
Park Hyatt Riviera Maya is slated to open by the end of 2026 on a secluded stretch of Caribbean coastline between Cancun and Puerto Morelos. The resort will sit within AMAI, a private coastal enclave reached through a mangrove landscape, and will be designed to feel spacious, calm and residential even at full occupancy.
The property will include 148 rooms and suites, all with views of the Caribbean, while select accommodations will feature private pools or plunge pools. A 2,300-square-foot penthouse will offer a larger retreat for guests seeking more space and privacy.
Hyatt describes the resort as rooted in Park Hyatt’s core qualities: residential luxury, personalized service, refined dining and a strong connection to the destination. Guests will be supported by a dedicated Resort Ambassador from pre-arrival onward, reinforcing the brand’s focus on quiet, intuitive service.
Food and beverage will be central to the experience. The resort will include seven dining venues with a chef-led culinary program, refined Mexican cuisine, seafood, global influences, a coffee bar focused on Mexican beans and The Botanist cocktail bar. Wellness will include a beachfront pool with private cabanas, an open-air spa garden, daily wellness rituals and preferred access to El Tinto Golf Course.
Grand Hyatt Los Cabos Goes Bigger on Groups
Grand Hyatt Los Cabos Resort, Golf & Spa is expected to open later this year within the Oleada Pacific Living & Golf oceanfront community in Cabo San Lucas. The 301-room all-inclusive resort will lean into the Grand Hyatt brand’s larger-scale, energetic style, with Baja-inspired architecture and a strong focus on leisure, events and celebrations.
The resort will include 244 standard rooms and 57 suites, including 42 swim-out rooms. Many accommodations will offer balconies, marble bathrooms, bathtubs, plunge pools or private pools, creating a coastal retreat designed for both couples and families.
A major part of the resort’s positioning is group travel. Grand Hyatt Los Cabos will offer more than 20,000 square feet of indoor meeting and event space, along with outdoor garden venues for weddings, corporate gatherings and social events.
The resort will also include five à la carte restaurants, five bars, rooftop cocktails, beachfront dining, a steakhouse, pan-Asian and Italian cuisine, a market café and a speakeasy. Amenities will include an Ernie Els-designed 18-hole golf course, kids’ and teen clubs, pickleball courts, multiple ocean-view pools, an adults-only pool, family-friendly infinity pools, a splash park and a spa with 12 treatment cabins.
Together, the two openings show Hyatt’s confidence in Mexico’s luxury all-inclusive future. Park Hyatt Riviera Maya aims for intimate, polished seclusion, while Grand Hyatt Los Cabos is built for scale, events and social energy. Both signal that all-inclusive travel is moving further into the luxury mainstream.