Under Canvas is luxury glamping with safari-inspired accommodations near U.S. national parks. There are 13 locations, including Yellowstone, Zion, Moab, Grand Canyon, and Yosemite. Tents have real beds and stoves, private or shared baths (including hot shower, flushing toilet and sink) and even viewing window for stargazing and suites with sofa beds and even private decks.
They feature West Elm furnishings and USB battery packs rather than electricity, and on-site dining. Plus there are activities like yoga, music, and outdoor games and a concierge staff to help with hiking, rafting, and canyoneering. Each night there’s s’mores at communal fire pits.
They have an earn and burn points relationship with Hyatt, and there are currently stackable offers that make trying Under Canvas glamping sites especially lucrative.
First, Hyatt co-brand cardmembers earn an extra 11 points per dollar up to 100,000 bonus points. Register by June 10, book stays through Hyatt channels, and stay June 1 – September 7, 2025.
Second, earn American AAdvantage miles for Under Canvas stays, too. Hyatt and American partner, so link your accounts. Then register by September 14 and stay June 15 – September 15, 2025.
Under Canvas, Zion National Park
These two promotions almost completely overlap. Stay June 15 – September 7, and you can earn with both. That means:
- 11 bonus points per dollar with the cardmember offer
- 4 points per dollar paying with a Hyatt cobrand card
- 5 base points in the program
- 1.5 bonus points as a Globalist.
Under Canvas, Zion National Park
That’s 21.5 Hyatt points per dollar which I value as a little more than a 30% rebate. Additionally, you can earn 1 American AAdvantage mile per dollar spent on top. Let’s call it a 32% or one-third rebate thanks to these stackable offers. So if this is your jam, some will consider this a pretty good time to stay.
@ Gary — Is there a club lounge, spa, restaurant, cable TV, little bottles of shampoo? No? Ick.
Nice! I feel for our National Park Rangers who are under threat of wrongly being DOGE’d these days. These parks are world-class treasures for all mankind, should be protected and preserved for posterity. Shout out to state and community parks, too.