The Edit is a “luxury” hotel booking program through Chase Travel℠ that’s available to JP Morgan Reserve, Chase Sapphire Reserve®, and Sapphire Reserve for Business® cardholders. It’s similar to Amex’s Fine Hotels and Resorts (FHR) program, but with a much more confounding, difficult-to-fit-into-sentences moniker.
The Edit stays include:
- Daily breakfast for 2
- $100 property credit per stay (such as dining or spa credits)
- Room upgrade at check-in (based on availability)
- Early check-in and late check-out (based on availability
- Complementary wifi
The Edit has become much more interesting within the past few months, due primarily to the dual $250 credits towards 2-night Edit bookings that come with the redesigned Sapphire Reserve cards. However, there’s been a significant problem when trying to find hotels to use those credits at: figuring out which properties participate in the Edit and where the heck they are.
Thanks to a map created by US Credit Card Guide and a list uncovered by a reddit user (and reported by Thrifty Traveler), it’s now much easier.

What’s New
- US Credit Card Guide has created a Google Map that shows every worldwide property that participates in Chase’s The Edit luxury hotel portfolio.
- In addition, Chase Travel℠ now lists all participating properties by country.
How to find a list of The Edit℠ properties in Chase Travel℠
- Log in to your Chase account and go to Chase Travel℠ (or log in here).
- Scroll down and click the “Discover The Edit by Chase Travel℠” button:

3. Click “See All Stays:”

4. You’ll arrive at an alphabetically-sorted list that shows every property in The Edit. You can either scroll to the country that you want to see, or select it by using the filter button on the right:

Quick Thoughts
We love tools that make searching for travel easier, and both of these are terrific. I actually prefer to use the list that’s on Chase Travel℠, primarily because it’s nice to be able to check out the images of the properties that I’m perusing. But they both make finding participating hotels much, much easier.
A big shout-out to Scott at US Credit Card Guide for creating the map and to redditor BestInDaWrldsBbyFmno for uncovering the Chase list. Thanks to both of them for sharing!





The problem is that The Edit is a joke. Just looked again for a three night refundable stay in Chicago in June at the Pendry (two queen room). Same dates (Wed/Thu/Fri). Here’s a rundown-
The Edit – $2148
Amex FHR and Direct – $1845
Agoda – did not have queen/queen room, was $1586 for a king room (which were cheaper across the board)
AA Hotels – $1534 + 15,000 AA miles
Rove – $1126 + 11,260 Rove miles
Edit – Obviously just one example, but the Edit credits are useless if the Edit prices are completely inflated! Not even considering, so won’t factor in the UR points IF you get them (my understanding is bookings that use the credit don’t get any points per T&Cs, although you may get points for $1848 x 8 I guess).
FHR – Can’t really complain about FHR rate – same price as direct, plus free breakfast and FHR benefits, plus the $300 credit, so really gets you down to $1545. It’s – fair? Plus 5x MR points – could value those at ~$175 so net $1370.
AA Hotels – if you value AA miles at 1.7c, that’s $255 of value, so really $1279 + at least 15k LPs (pretty good!). No breakfast. Plus 10x the spend in miles on the AA Exec Card so that’s another 15k miles / $255 of value so nets to ~$1000.
Rove – cheapest! No breakfast. $100 cheaper than AA Hotels plus Rove miles. Even if you value those at 1.0c (and they are probably worth more), gets you down to ~$1000. Plus some miles on the spend depending on what card you use and how it rings up.
For me, because of the 30k AA miles and the 15k+ LPs, AA Hotels is the winner. Rove could be the winner for many. FHR is in the running for sure – free breakfast for 3 days, potential for room upgrades, check-in/out times, $100 property credit, totally could be worth the extra ~$370.
But the Edit… I’ve looked a number of times now. It’s just wildly inflated. And even if you want to use PointsBoost! – all they did was pretend you are getting 2x points value but they inflated the prices so much it’s really like you are getting 1.5x!
The state of Chase is just sad.
Omg thx for sharing. Chase’s way of presenting the hotels in the edit collection is absurd and seems intentionally difficult. I hope this is up to date tho.
Lol, the Rock House map icon is on the Rock House cave in Hocking Hills State Park in Ohio. Presumably this should be the Rock House hotel in Turks and Caicos.
Tools like this map can be very useful. But only insofar as the tool is kept up to date. It takes a modest effort to put such a thing together. It takes a lot more effort and some dedication to maintaining it (I bet somebody there knows this all too well)…).
You may want to clarify those benefits. The breakfast for two is property dependent, not a guaranteed perk like those offered through Fine Hotels & Resorts. I’ve used the Chase Sapphire Reserve’s Edit program several times, especially in Las Vegas, and some hotels have already removed the breakfast credit. When I called Chase to confirm whether it was a standard benefit or determined by each property, they verified that it’s at the property’s discretion. You can see this when making the booking. In short, the breakfast credit isn’t guaranteed, and a few Vegas properties have already dropped it.
Note that the site you are referring, uscreditcardguide.com, is actually a Chinese website. You don’t know what they are putting on your computer. That kind of help might be too expensive in the long run….
On that note, I opened the map a few days ago take a look. I just opened my Google maps again to search for something else but it still has the Edit hotels locations still showing. I don’t know how to get rid of this from my Maps! Appreciate if anyone has advice on removing the Edit hotel locations from Maps
That’s great but are there any options where the Edit credit mostly covers 2 nights?
A redditor was working on a tool to gather datapoints on hotels that cover 2 nights… not many lol seems like Vegas & DC have some options
I’m not sure which listing (here or Chase) is out of date, but the Shangri-La Vancouver has changed to Hyatt Downtown Alberni and will become a Park Hyatt in 2026. Just stayed there last week and it was a great use of the FHR credit, which almost entirely covered the one night stay.
Should this also be tagged Chase Sapphire Reserve like the Sapphire Exclusive Tables article (and should that be tagged Chase)?
Thank you!!!