Chase Offers, the card-linked discount program available to Chase credit card holders, has added a targeted offer for Hyatt’s Under Canvas glamping properties. The offer provides 15 percent back as a statement credit on a single transaction between $450 and $467, which works out to a maximum credit of approximately $70. For frequent flyers and World of Hyatt members who have been considering an Under Canvas stay, the offer can reduce the net cost, but the narrow spending band and the refund and cancellation rules that govern how statement credits interact with changed bookings require attention. This article reviews the offer’s mechanics, the Under Canvas redemption landscape for World of Hyatt members, and the refund-rule considerations that determine whether the savings actually materialize.
Chase Offers are targeted promotions that appear in the Chase mobile app or online banking portal under a dedicated offers section. Cardholders browse available offers and add the ones they want to their card. Once added, the offer is activated, and qualifying purchases made with that card automatically trigger the statement credit within the timeframe specified in the offer terms, typically a few weeks after the transaction posts.
The Hyatt Under Canvas Chase Offer has several notable features. First, the spending band is unusually narrow: the transaction must be between $450 and $467 to qualify. A transaction of $449.99 earns nothing, and a transaction of $467.01 earns nothing. This precision means cardholders must carefully construct their Under Canvas booking to fall within the band, which may require selecting specific dates, room types, or add-ons that produce a total within range.
Second, the offer is typically limited to one use per card, meaning the 15 percent back applies to a single transaction. For cardholders who hold multiple Chase cards, the offer may appear on more than one card, allowing multiple uses if multiple Under Canvas stays are planned. However, Chase Offers are targeted, and there is no guarantee that the offer will appear on every card or for every cardholder.
Third, the offer has an expiration date. Cardholders should check the specific expiration date on their offer and ensure the Under Canvas booking is charged before the offer expires and within any additional timing conditions specified.
Under Canvas is a collection of upscale glamping resorts located near several U.S. national parks, including locations near Zion, Yellowstone, Glacier, Great Smoky Mountains, Acadia, and the Grand Canyon. Under Canvas properties are part of the World of Hyatt program through a partnership that allows Hyatt members to earn and redeem points at these properties, as well as enjoy elite benefits subject to the program’s terms for participating Small Luxury Hotels of the World and other partner properties.
World of Hyatt points redemptions at Under Canvas properties typically require a significant number of points relative to traditional Hyatt hotel redemptions, and availability can be limited during peak national park seasons. Paying cash for an Under Canvas stay, either because points availability is not present or because the points rate represents poor value, is the scenario in which the Chase Offer becomes relevant. The offer effectively reduces the cash cost by the statement credit amount, which can tip the balance in favor of a cash booking over a points redemption for travelers who value Hyatt points above the credit-adjusted cash rate.
For Hyatt elite members, cash stays at Under Canvas qualify for elite night credit and points earning under the World of Hyatt program, just as paid stays at traditional Hyatt properties do. A 15 percent statement credit from Chase does not affect the Hyatt points earned on the stay, since the charge to the card is the full booking amount, and the credit appears separately as a Chase statement credit, not as a Hyatt discount.
The $450 to $467 band requires deliberate booking construction. Under Canvas nightly rates vary significantly by season, day of the week, and room type. A two-night summer stay at a popular property may run well above $467, while a one-night off-peak stay may fall below $450. Cardholders who want to use the offer must find a booking whose base rate, taxes, and any applicable resort fees total within the band.
One approach is to book a single night at a property with a rate that falls within the band after taxes. Another approach is to use a partial payment strategy, where the cardholder makes a deposit or partial payment that falls within the band, though Chase Offers terms typically require the total transaction to qualify, not a partial payment. Cardholders should review the offer terms to confirm whether partial payments or deposits count, and if not, construct the booking to produce a total within the band in a single charge.
The precision of the band also means that sharing the room cost across multiple cards or splitting the bill is not a workaround for a booking that exceeds $467, because each card’s transaction would need to independently fall within the band to trigger the credit. For bookings that exceed $467, the offer cannot be used, and the cardholder must either accept the full price or look for a different discount channel.
Statement credit offers from Chase and other issuers are subject to an important condition: if the purchase that triggered the credit is later refunded, the credit may be reversed. If the Under Canvas booking is canceled or modified after the statement credit posts, and the refund reduces the transaction amount below the offer’s qualifying threshold, the statement credit may be clawed back, negating the savings.
Under Canvas cancellation policies vary by property and booking channel. Reservations made directly through Under Canvas typically have cancellation windows that allow free cancellation up to a certain number of days before arrival, with penalties applying closer to the check-in date. If a cardholder books, receives the Chase statement credit, and then cancels within the free-cancellation window, the credit will almost certainly be reversed. If the cardholder modifies the booking and the new total falls outside the $450 to $467 band, the credit may also be at risk.
The practical implication is that cardholders should be reasonably certain they will take the Under Canvas trip before relying on the Chase Offer to reduce the net cost. If the trip is speculative or the dates are uncertain, the statement credit may not stick, and the savings should not be counted as realized until the trip is completed and the refund window has closed. For travelers whose plans are firm, the offer represents a genuine discount with no strings beyond the usual Chase Offer terms.
Before committing to the Chase Offer, cardholders should compare the 15 percent statement credit against other discount channels for Under Canvas. Under Canvas occasionally runs seasonal promotions that discount nightly rates by a larger percentage, particularly for early-season or shoulder-season travel. The Capital One Offers and Amex Offers programs sometimes feature Under Canvas promotions with different structures, such as a fixed dollar amount off a minimum spend or a percentage back on a wider spending band.
World of Hyatt members may also have access to member rates that discount the standard rate, and those member rates may be combinable with the Chase Offer if the Chase Offer terms do not exclude bookings made at member rates. The interaction between promotional rates and Chase Offers is not always explicit in the offer terms, and cardholders should check the fine print to confirm that a member-rate booking qualifies for the statement credit.
For travelers who hold the Chase Sapphire Reserve or Chase Sapphire Preferred, booking through the Chase Travel portal earns bonus Ultimate Rewards points on travel purchases and may offer pricing that competes with the Under Canvas direct rate after accounting for the Chase Offer credit. However, Chase Travel portal bookings are often prepaid and nonrefundable, which introduces additional cancellation risk that the direct-booking-plus-offer approach does not.
This article is based on publicly available Chase Offers terms, Under Canvas property information and World of Hyatt partnership terms, and general credit card statement credit offer practices as of July 2026. Chase Offers are targeted and may not be available to all cardholders. Offer terms, spending bands, and expiration dates are subject to change and should be confirmed in the Chase app before booking. Under Canvas rates and cancellation policies vary by property and season.
Q: Do I need to activate the Chase Offer before booking? A: Yes. Chase Offers must be added to the card through the Chase app or online banking portal before the qualifying transaction posts. Transactions made before the offer is activated will not qualify for the statement credit.
Q: What happens if I book Under Canvas for $470 and then modify the booking to reduce it to $460? A: The initial $470 charge is not within the qualifying spending band, so no statement credit would be issued. If you then modify and receive a partial refund that nets to $460, the offer typically still would not trigger because the offer is evaluated on the original transaction. The safer approach is to build the booking to fall within the band from the start.
Q: Can I use the Chase Offer on multiple cards for one Under Canvas stay? A: No, because the offer requires a single transaction between $450 and $467. Splitting the stay cost across multiple cards would result in each card’s charge falling below $450, and neither would trigger the credit. Use one card and ensure the total falls within the band.
Q: Does the Chase Offer apply if I pay with Ultimate Rewards points through Chase Travel? A: No. Chase Offers apply to purchases made with the card, not to point redemptions. Payments made with points, even through the Chase Travel portal, do not generate a qualifying transaction for statement credit offers.
Q: If I cancel an Under Canvas booking after receiving the Chase statement credit, will the credit be clawed back? A: Almost certainly yes. Chase reserves the right to reverse statement credits when the underlying transaction is refunded. If you cancel within the free-cancellation window and receive a full refund, expect the statement credit to be reversed. Do not count the savings as realized until your stay is completed and the cancellation window has passed.