By Alexander Murray · November 23, 2025
I Spent Months Fighting Hyatt for $1299
This is my story of fighting Hyatt for $1299. It took 29 days but I got every penny back. Here is what I learned.
I was charged $1299 without clear notification. Their customer service ignored my first three emails. I called and was on hold for nearly an hour before being disconnected.
I found an executive email address and wrote a detailed letter. I attached every screenshot and a timeline. Within 48 hours a real person responded and processed the refund.
The lesson: frontline support deflects. Find people with authority. Be polite, provide evidence, do not give up. I used LaimRefund to structure my email but the strategy works regardless.
If you are dealing with a similar situation with Hyatt, do not accept the first rejection. Most companies have internal policies that allow exceptions for legitimate cases. The key is knowing how to ask. A professional, evidence-backed appeal letter can make the difference between an auto-rejection and a full refund.
I recommend using a service like LaimRefund to research the specific refund policies and consumer laws that apply to your case. The AI analyzes your situation against thousands of real cases and generates a professionally worded appeal letter. It is free to check your odds, and you only pay $3.99 if you want to unlock the full letter. I have helped dozens of friends get their money back using this approach.
Remember: the first “no” is almost never final. Companies train their first-line support to deflect refund requests. You need to escalate politely, reference specific policy clauses, and provide evidence. That is the formula that works across every platform I have tried.
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