
Hyatt Centric Milan Centrale is a 141-room design hotel in Milan’s Stazione Centrale / Garibaldi-edge area, positioned near Milano Centrale station with access to Piazza Gae Aulenti, Bosco Verticale, Corso Como, and the Duomo. It combines a practical transit location with design-forward rooms, a wellness area, and rooftop dining as a World of Hyatt lifestyle property.
Bookable with World of Hyatt points. Award pricing varies by date and category, so we link straight to the official World of Hyatt award chart for current rates rather than publishing a number that can go stale. Cash rates below are our own observed rack rates, not what the program charges in points.
“Hyatt Centric Milan Centrale is a 141-room design hotel in Milan’s Stazione Centrale / Garibaldi-edge area, positioned near Milano Centrale station with access to Piazza Gae Aulenti, Bosco Verticale, Corso Como, and the Duomo. It combines a practical transit location with design-forward rooms, a wellness area, and rooftop dining as a World of Hyatt lifestyle property.”
The hotel sits in a location described as a bridge between Milan’s old and modern sides, offering travelers convenient transit access alongside proximity to newer business and nightlife districts. Its 141 guestrooms and suites feature custom-designed furniture, wooden parquet flooring, and complimentary Wi-Fi, with some suites offering terraces and city views. Design elements define the property, including a glass façade with shifting colors inspired by the Pantone Color System, bold architecture, murals, and sketches by local designers. On-site amenities include a fitness center plus a wellness area with a Roman bath featuring whirlpool and water games, sauna, Turkish bath, salt cave, sensory showers, relaxation room, and herbal tea corner. Dining consists of the rooftop restaurant Rivington, which adapts a New York-inspired concept with Milanese flair, alongside the open-air Organics SkyGarden and room service. The wellness area operates with reservations, set hours, a €30 per-person charge, and an age minimum of 18.
Milan’s shoulder seasons offer fewer crowds and lower prices, with milder weather than the hotter, busier summer period.
July and August are peak-travel months with higher prices and crowds, and climate sources describe them as the hottest part of the year in northern Italy/Milan.
Cash rates are re-checked by hand; live award pricing comes straight from the program rather than a number we publish here — see methodology.