GE International has a significant operational footprint in Japan, and Tokyo trips tend to run multiple nights, which means even a 15% nightly discount compounds fast. Code 13307 at the Hyatt Regency Tokyo cuts your rate and still earns full World of Hyatt points, so you're saving on two fronts. If you're heading to meetings in Shinjuku or the broader Tokyo metro, this is the property that keeps your per diem intact.
The Property
The Hyatt Regency Tokyo sits at 2-chome-7-2 Nishishinjuku, right in the Shinjuku skyscraper district on the west side of Shinjuku Station. The neighborhood is Tokyo's corporate heartland, packed with office towers, government buildings, and easy subway connections to every major business hub. It carries a 4.2 rating across over 6,300 reviews, which is solid for a large-format hotel in this price tier.
Rooms at this Regency tier typically start around 28 square meters, with larger options on the Regency Club floors that include lounge access with evening cocktails and breakfast. Work desks are full-size with proper lighting and international power outlets, which matters when you're prepping for morning meetings across time zones. Expect blackout curtains and strong Wi-Fi throughout, both standard for Hyatt's Regency brand in Asia.
The hotel has a proper fitness center, an outdoor pool (seasonal), and multiple on-site restaurants covering Japanese, Chinese, and Western cuisine. Club lounge access on upper floors is worth upgrading to if your budget allows, as it includes a quiet workspace during the day and complimentary evening drinks. There is no airport shuttle, and Narita is about 75 km away, roughly an hour by car or Narita Express train.
Shinjuku Station, one of the world's busiest transit hubs, is a 5 to 7 minute walk, giving you direct JR and Metro lines to Marunouchi, Roppongi, and Shinagawa. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, with its free observation decks, is practically next door. Dozens of restaurants line the underground walkways connecting the station to the hotel area, from quick ramen joints to business-dinner izakayas.
Your Savings Breakdown
| Rate Tier | Rack Rate | Corporate Rate | Points Earned | Point Value | Net Cost | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | $220 | $187 | 935 pts | $15.89 | $171.10 | $48.90 |
| Superior | $350 | $298 | 1,490 pts | $25.33 | $272.67 | $77.33 |
| Premium | $550 | $468 | 2,340 pts | $39.78 | $428.22 | $121.78 |
A room that racks at $350 per night drops to about $298 with GE International's corporate code 13307, saving $52 upfront. On top of that, you earn roughly 1,490 World of Hyatt points per night at 5 points per dollar, and those points are worth about $25.33 at 1.7 cents each. That brings your effective net cost down to $272.67 per night, a total savings of $77.33 compared to the public rate.
How to Book with Code 13307
- Go to worldofhyatt.com and log into your World of Hyatt account, or create one if you haven't already.
- Enter Tokyo as your destination and select your travel dates.
- Expand the Special Rates section and find the Corporate or Negotiated Rate field.
- Enter code 13307 in the corporate code field.
- Compare the corporate rate against the standard rate to confirm your discount, then complete the booking.
Stack Your Savings
If you hold World of Hyatt Globalist or Explorist status, your elite benefits apply on top of the corporate rate. That means potential suite upgrades, late checkout, club lounge access, and waived resort fees all layer onto the discounted price from code 13307. Even Discoverist members get a 2 PM late checkout and bonus points, so make sure your loyalty number is on every reservation.
The World of Hyatt credit card from Chase earns 4x bonus points on Hyatt spending, which stacks with the 5 base points per dollar you already earn as a loyalty member. That means a $298 night could generate over 2,600 total points across base and card bonus earnings. If you carry the Business version, you also get automatic Discoverist status and a path to Globalist through card spending.
Hyatt frequently runs Bonus Journeys promotions, typically offering double or triple points for stays during specific windows. Watch for these in Q1 and Q3, as they tend to coincide with heavy business travel seasons. Booking midweek generally yields the best corporate rate availability, while weekend stays in Shinjuku can sometimes price lower on the public rate, so always compare before applying the code.
Bottom Line: GE International employees staying at the Hyatt Regency Tokyo can expect to save between $48.90 and $121.78 per night depending on room category and season, with the mid-range landing around $77 in combined rate discount and points value. The location in Nishishinjuku puts you steps from major transit and right in Tokyo's business core, making it a practical base that doesn't waste your time or your travel budget. Code 13307 is the straightest line between a good hotel and a good rate in this city.