For two decades, tucked just beyond the security lines of Terminal D, the Grand Hyatt DFW has been the airport’s quietest open secret. Here, the clatter of rolling suitcases fades, the pace softens, and travelers discover that an overnight stay inside one of the busiest airports in the world can feel downright indulgent. Now, as it celebrates its twentieth anniversary, the hotel that turned layovers into something closer to a luxury ritual is gearing up for a transformation as ambitious as the airport it calls home.
The $34 million overhaul, unfolding in phases and scheduled for completion by early 2026, will impact nearly every corner of the property, according to a release. What opened in 2005 as the first Grand Hyatt built inside an airport — and the first brand ever built in Texas — is getting a top-to-bottom refresh designed to keep pace with a region whose sense of scale has only grown larger.
From the beginning, the Grand Hyatt DFW wasn’t just a place to crash between flights. It was built for overnight travelers chasing a little calm, for conferences seeking convenience without sacrifice, and for events that needed runway-level drama. Direct access to Terminal D made it a refuge for the weary, a discreet home base for business travelers, and an unexpected hideout for locals who prefer good cocktails, killer views, and the quiet hum of aircraft coming and going just outside the windows.
This anniversary comes with a nod to the people who have kept the hotel humming. Eight staff members who have been on the job since opening day in 2005 are being honored — the kind of tenure that feels almost mythic in hospitality. Their work in food and beverage, events, housekeeping, and stewarding has shaped the hotel’s reputation as a property where service feels less like a transaction and more like a steadying hand on your back after a red-eye.
Jeff Babcock, the general manager, put it plainly. The next chapter, he says, is less a reinvention than a reinforcement — a way to preserve the hotel’s legacy at the heart of one of the busiest airports in the world while expanding its capacity for the demands of modern travelers.
The redesign leans into the airport’s aeronautical roots without losing sight of the land that surrounds it. The revamped lobby will greet guests with marble flooring, dramatic ceiling features, and new lighting that feels both sculpted and warm. Art by local creators lines the walls — a reminder that even amid global traffic, the hotel’s feet remain firmly planted in North Texas soil.
Upstairs, room inventory climbs from 298 to 315, each space washed in natural blues and muted greens, the palette borrowed from the western prairies. Soothing textures and clean lines promise calm after a day in the air, while blackout sheers and automated shades open as soon as you walk in. Many rooms frame the airport runways like a living mural — the perpetual choreography of takeoffs and landings never quite the same twice.
Bathrooms, now gleaming with expanded vanities, spacious showers, and soaking tubs, signal a commitment to comfort that goes beyond convenience.
At Grand Met Restaurant and Lounge, the transformation is a culinary reset. The kitchen will spotlight locally sourced ingredients woven into international flavors — a nod to the global crossroads outside. The refreshed space will offer private and semi-private dining rooms, modern seating, and an acoustic ceiling designed to keep conversations confidential, even as the room buzzes.
More than 20,000 square feet of meeting and event space are being reimagined, including a 6,600-square-foot ballroom and a new top-floor executive boardroom. But the crown jewel may be the indoor-outdoor rooftop venue, an event space that overlooks the runways and offers a panorama of the airport’s ceaseless motion — a backdrop that’s hard to duplicate anywhere else in Texas.
Even the updated guest corridors lean into storytelling, their new carpet patterns reflecting both airfield design and the movement of aircraft overhead.
Two decades after it first welcomed travelers, the Grand Hyatt DFW is embracing the future with the same ambition that defined its debut.
Babcock added, “As we elevate and expand the hotel to accommodate more guests and groups and implement the latest technology, the transformation of the property reinforces its legacy as the premier hotel and event venue within Dallas Fort Worth International Airport.”