Tl;dr – Be patient, enjoy the free status, and then get to work.
Yesterday, we saw the return of the Instant Status match offer – a team-up between American Airlines and Hyatt that allows elite members of each program to temporarily enjoy the tiered status benefits of the other program, with the option to maintain that status long-term by completing a challenge.

I’m a Hyatt Globalist, and in the past, I’ve also been an American AAdvantage Executive Platinum. I first earned EP a few years back by completing the challenge granted to me because of my Globalist status. I’ve since dropped to AAdvantage Gold and had no real plans or motivation to chase status with American or any other airlines for that matter. When this challenge came along yesterday, I briefly considered it but decided to opt-in instead to enjoy high-tier AAdvantage status for the remainder of this year. Then, I can optionally chase American the traditional way at the beginning of 2026, to maximize the time I’d hold American status. Let’s not forget that Platinum Pro translates to Emerald Status across the oneworld Alliance, so this could mean a free four months of Emerald status for my upcoming travels.

If all that came off a bit jumbled, let me break it down for you. I’m going in:
Speedrunning Top-Tier AAdvantage Status
The Status Challenge requires that you earn a fixed amount of Loyalty points within three four-month phases.

You have until September 4, 2025 to open into the status challenge.
You should wait until closer to this date to opt-in, so as to push out the ending date of your first four-month (Phase 1) window as long as possible, into the early parts of 2026.
Once you do this, you should just enjoy the status. Don’t go out of your way to earn loyalty points in a fixed amount of time. The reason? Per the terms of the challenge, even if you do amass all the points you need to keep the tiered status (or uplevel) for phase 2, and then do the same for phase 3, you’ll only enjoy that status through the end of 2026.

Instead, you should enjoy four months of elite status from early September to early January, and then focus all of your efforts on re-qualifying as quickly as possible at the beginning of the year, on the regular AAdvantage timeline. That way, once you earn the status, you’ll enjoy it through the end of 2027, a full year longer than you would if you completed the Instant Status Match.
And how do I recommend you requalify? I’m glad you asked. If you, like me, are already a Hyatt Globalist, you can afford to spend a few nights out of brand. You’re status isn’t going anywhere. Treat yourself to a vacation in January, and book all of your hotels through AAdvantage Hotels. Focus on medium to nicer properties that offer a reasonable Loyalty Point rate per dollar. And of course, you’ll want to pay for your bookings with the Citi / AAdvantage Executive World Elite Mastercard.

Yes, you’ll forgo the earnings of nights with Hyatt, but if you can find a few solid properties that pay out 10K-15K in Loyalty points per night, you’ll rack up the necessary 125,000 Loyalty points for Platinum Pro or 200,000 Loyalty points for Executive Platinum rather quickly, especially because the Citi / AAdvantage Executive World Elite Mastercard has two bonuses to help you out:
You get 10,000 Loyalty point boosters once you cross the 50K and 90K thresholds.

Additionally, the Citi / AAdvantage Executive World Elite Mastercard earns 10x AAdvantage miles on eligible hotels booked through the AAdvantage Hotels booking platform. These miles translate directly to 1 Loyalty Point per mile earned, meaning you’ll also earn 10 Loyalty Points for every dollar spent on eligible hotel bookings through that platform.

So if you can ‘get to work’ early in the year, say January or February, and can find some sweet spots hotel deals for ~$200-$300 a night, you’ll get an extra 20000 – 30000 loyalty points just for the spend through the AAdvantage Hotels Portal alone.
Factoring in the Loyalty Points earnings from the stays themselves, as well as the two 10K boosters, you’ll likely have enough LPs to earn you Platinum Pro or EP in less than a month. And in reality, the journey would be a lot more rewarding. You’ll earn as many redeemable AAdvantage Miles (likely more) as you do Loyalty Points so you can do the math and subtraact the value of those miles against whatever you end up spending on hotels to see how you made out in terms of the cost to ‘earning’ top-tier status. You’d also accrue several Loyalty Point Rewards along the way.

It’s worth nothing that the terms and services of the Instant Status Match do indicate that the offer can be pulled at anytime, but that seems less like American and Hyatt and more like, oh I don’t know Turkish Airlines?
This is my favorite way to earn meaningful alliance status and it’s optimized for folks who don’t actually love spending a ton of time racking up miles flying, but do enjoy enjoying the best parts of flying (lounges, upgrades) when you are traveling.
Finally, don’t forget to have a fun on that dope vacation in January too!