what other hotels would you recommend? Hyatt hotel seems expensive for me.
and it appears staying at hotels longer than a month has difference prices? is it by seasonality due to travelling?
I think if Hyatt isn't a realistic option, Novotel is the next best option. It's breakfast is alot better than Montaza's. It's not as nice as Hyatt but its still nicer than Montaza. There used to be alot at Montaza but there's just 2 now and more and more people are switching to Novotel instead
But actually I wonder-- is Novotel really the next best hotel option budget wise?
Hyatt I feel is significantly better in the colder months October-March because it has an indoor pool to train in. I visited each of the three and Hyatt is definitely the nicest/most luxurious, has a better pool than Novotel that is indoors, has a nice indoor jacuzzi, sauna
I sort of wonder how much of the Hyatt stay can be covered with credit card points alone. I know that some other patients used credit card points to cover alot of their stay
https://world.hyatt.com/content/gp/en/rewards/hyatt-credit-card.htmlI can't get the Hyatt hotel card right now because the card is partnered with Chase and they have a rule that you can't have more than 5 new credit cards within 24 months (so I have to wait a bit, I grabbed a few other small credit card signup bonuses with those).
Looks like the Hyatt credit card has a 60000 point signup bonus. Google says each point is worth about 2.8 cents per point. So about 60000*2.8/100 = 1680 USD worth of the cost can be covered with the signup bonus. Also you get a free night after each year anniversary of owning the card which more than cancels out the annual fee.
"Already a Cardmember? Refer a friend and you can earn up to 25,000 Bonus Points per year for friends who get the card. Invite now."
I can't get the card now or participate--but if you guys refer each other, you can sort of all mutually get 25000*2.8/100= about 700 more USD towards the cost covered with points.
And then lets see, it looks it says you get 9 points per dollar spent on Hyatt hotels (5 of those from being a World of Hyatt member but I don't believe there is an annual fee or any difficult application for that), and if each point is about 2.8 cents its like.. 0.09*2.8= 0.252 or about 25% percent off the cost of the Hyatt hotel (each week you pay helps alot to pay for the next week). Which makes it more comparable to Novotel's price
"9 points total per $1 spent for Hyatt stays and experiences including restaurants and spas. That's:
4 Bonus Points per $1 you spend with your card**
5 Base Points per $1 you can earn as a World of Hyatt member
2 Bonus Points per $1 spent for getting around with local transit and commuting**
2 Bonus Points per $1 spent for dining out at restaurants, cafes and coffee shops**
2 Bonus Points per $1 spent for taking off with flights purchased directly from the airline**
2 Bonus Points per $1 spent for staying healthy with fitness club and gym memberships**
1 Bonus Point per $1 spent for wherever life takes you**"
I mean these are better bonus point multipliers than they look because if google says that each Hyatt point is worth about 2.8 cents, actually these multipliers are like double than what they look like
So it feels like depending on what you do, you can cover like 2000-4000 USD of the cost with Hyatt hotel credit card points.
At least in the USA, its also a good idea to get the charles schwab debit card because you'll need to get physical cash from the hospital ATM in Athens (ex: we pay for the Dr. Giotikas's arranged travel by cash now) and charles schwab will reimburse you for the ATM fees
I regret not getting the Hyatt credit card. Around the time, I got a different credit card that is not nearly as good (smaller bonus, worse point multipliers)
If you have any extra Hyatt credit card points after you finish, you can use them when you come back to Athens to do nail removal (say if you do gnail, Dr. Giotikas has a good price for nail removal, I believe he is significantly cheaper than Dr. Jean-March Guichet for nail removal)