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Anyone been disappointed in a Priceline Hotel?

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Anyone been disappointed in a Priceline Hotel?

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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 11:57 AM
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Anyone been disappointed in a Priceline Hotel?

I used Priceline.com for an overnight stay in London a few months ago. Not only did I get a hotel that was supposed to be 5 star that was more like 3 star, the hotel was not really in the area of London it says it is.

Now I am thinking about giving Priceline another try as I keep reading Biddingfortravel.com and betterbidding.com and see lots of bidders having success gettting the hotel of their choice. Just a random question: How many of you have gotten the hotel of your choice on Priceline? (That is if you had a hotel of choice in mind before bidding). There is only really one hotel I want and just wonder what you think my chances are getting it? Thanks!
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 12:03 PM
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I have gotten great rooms on priceline!
Chicago Palmer House
Hilton towers
Hyatt
Hotel Allegro
Monaco

Seattle Grand Hyatt [so far the best]
San Francisco Kensington Post
London Tara Copthorne
Dolphin Square [another favorite]
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 12:05 PM
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I have never gotten the "hotel of my choice" on Priceline, because you do not get to "choose" a hotel with Priceline. If you wish to choose your hotel, you need to book in a conventional way.

Can you guess/hope for a certain hotel when you are bidding with Priceline? Of course, and more than once I have been lucky. But before making my Priceline offer, I have always been willing to accept whatever hotel they give me provided it meets the standards they have set. If you are not willing to accept any hotel that meets the standards, don't use Priceline.

BiddingForTravel.com is a great site for learning which hotels people are getting in a particular zone, but even if only one hotel has ever come up on BFT in a particular zone, there is NO GUARANTEE that Priceline won't add a new hotel tomorrow and you could be the first person to get it! This uncertainty is one of the reasons you can get such good hotel rates with Priceline. Sometimes you get the hotel you would wish for, sometimes you don't.

As for hotel quality: I have always been satisfied with the hotels I've gotten with Priceline. Sometimes I get hotels that are average and acceptable, others I get hotels that are excellent at fantastic prices. I expect average and am pleased to get above-average.

If the London hotel you got with Priceline was not in the area where it was supposed to be or it did not have an anmenity that it was guaranteed to have (e.g. a restaurant on site), you have grounds to request a refund as Priceline has violated their part of their agreement with you the customer. It's up to you do persue this, not them.

Andrew
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 12:14 PM
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Thanks Andrew. I know I do not get to choose a hotel at Priceline. I was just wondering if many people out there had a hotel they preferred and were lucky enough to win that hotel.

As for my incident in London, I may pursue contacting Priceline. I was attending a seminar that ended very late and needed a place to stay for the night that was in walking distance of my lecture. I ended up needing a taxi anyway. The hotel was not in the area/zone as stated.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 12:26 PM
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Yes, a few times, and have been happy with some of my other stays through Priceline. I think that if PRICE is most important than Priceline is for you. And sometimes Priceline just does not fit the Location that I am looking for. Sometimes it is just better to be EXCACTLY where you want to be and money is less a factor for satidfaction.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 12:46 PM
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Priceline is quite clera about the criteria they use for rating their hotels. But hte hotels do report these features themselves, so I agree with the above recommendation that you contact PL if the hotel was misrepresenting itself to them and (hence) you.

PL provides detailed maps that show its own definitions of the zones. In the cities I travel to, these do not exactly ovelap with the borders that locals or tourists would draw, so you do have to be careful about the geography.

Your chances of getting a specific hotel are completely un-guessable. I suppose if BFT lists it as the only hotel in tha zone/star category, then your chances are good, but since there are no guarantees you should not use PL if you have your heart set on a specific place.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 01:06 PM
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I've only done one Priceline and that was for one night only in NYC on fairly short notice when everything was pretty full, so didn't get a great price despite having to make a couple bids. Still it was a better price than I could get otherwise. Got Times Square Hilton for about $169 as I recall. Meanwhile, we got a horrible room. The desk clerk told us it was because we were there on Priceline ("you have to admit you didn't pay much did you?") and because we were only there for one night and otherwise the hotel was full so they couldn't change us. I also showed my Hilton Honors card and she told me that didn't mean a thing since I had booked through Priceline not through Hilton.
I realize most people say this treatment was unusual, but it happened nevertheless.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 01:16 PM
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I think Priceline's distribution of hotels by area in London is nutty. From limited experience, I generally expect accommodatations to be a star lower than advertised. There are bargains to be found (especially if you use biddingfortravel to strategize) but I tend to keep my expectation down since I'm bottomfeeding for lower cost.

Hotel of choice? Wouldn't bid if I had my heart set on one property. For cities I visit frequently, I have preferred hotels which I know (via BFT) are PL hotels. I know the acceptable bidding range and 4 time out of 5, I'll get the hotel I want. I'd be way less adventurous in an unknown city.

Sorry to hear of your bad experience. Would you report back after your interaction with PL about the London hotel?
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 01:19 PM
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Patrick, what did you pay with Priceline vs. what you could have paid on your own? As a rule, I won't bid too high on Priceline - it's not worth being locked into a hotel unless I can save a considerable amount of money. I certainly wouldn't do it for minimum $20/night savings, perhaps more. Depends on the situation I guess. I know for me it's not worth saving only $20 to use Priceline...

Whenever people say "the hotel gave us a crappy room because we used Priceline" I always ask, "To whom should the hotel have given that room?" If they were full, wouldn't you expect them to give the least desirable rooms to the people who paid the least? They won't leave the room vacant just because no one bid on Priceline that night - SOMEONE will get it that room if they fill up. You might argue that the hotel should not rent out what you consider a sub-standard room (near a noisy elevator or something) but that's kind of a different issue.

If the room you got was clean, quiet, and had at least one double bed, you have no right to complain about it, really. That's all Priceline guarantees (plus perhaps certain amenities). Sometimes people who you use Priceline seem unreasonable to me to expect one of the better rooms in the hotel even though they may have paid the least of any guest!

I would be wary of rooms in cities like NYC and Chicago, from what I have read, because the hotels Priceline uses there tend to have small rooms or may be not as well kept up. This is one reason the reviews on BFT are so helpful.

Andrew
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 01:31 PM
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I've generally been pleased with Priceline but I've gotten a couple of "almost dogs" (Lenox Suites in Chicago, Westin Galleria in Houston, NY Hilton) that needed renovation as well. A couple were great and none were terrible. I've never been treated as a "Priceline guest" overtly.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 02:23 PM
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The only time I was disppointed was when another priceline bid spoiled me for the next one. I decided to stay an extra night in a city and duplicated the bid that won me the fantastic 4-star room I was in. I got a different hotel that was nice, but nothing like the first one.
 
Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 02:49 PM
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Andrew, the cheapest room I could get from Times Square Hilton for that particular night was about $219, so yes the savings were worth it.

And Andrew I agree totally about "who else should have gotten that room", which is one reason I'm a bit leary of doing Priceling. Like it or not if the hotel is full, the customer who got a room at bargain prices from another source IS the most likely to get the worst room. It's only logical and good business for the hotel. Better than giving that room to a person who booked direct at a much higher price.

I only did Priceline that time because it was only for one night and was willing to take a chance. Mostly I wouldn't take a chance, because I generally have very specific ideas of exactly where I want to stay. I had thought about bidding Priceline in Las Vegas this summer for two nights, but when I got a deal of $69 or so direct from Alladin, I decided it wasn't worth it to chance Priceline.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 03:39 PM
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Parisandelle: Did you check biddingfortravel.com before using PL? They give you a comprehensive list of which hotels are in which zones.

In London, a couple of the PL zones are labled a bit different than I would, but all make a ceratin amount of geographic sense.

And, sorry, but to ever use PL when you want a specific hotel, or to be walking distance from a specific venue is just not sensible.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 03:41 PM
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That should read "a certain amount . . ."
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 05:29 PM
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Priceline seems to include much less desirable areas of a city in zones with desirable areas and names the zones after the desirable areas. This is, I suspect, to move the empty rooms offered from less desirable areas which otherwise wouldn't get any bids at all. The zones do not follow the accepted boundaries of the areas after which they are named. Airport zones can be the worst, with part of the "Airport" zone being far away from the airport, with no convenient public transportation. A zone named for an area in the touristic center of a city may include areas well outside the central city. Check maps VERY carefully.

Similarly, the hotels will be selling their least desirable rooms at Priceline's distress prices. The rooms may be small, or dark, or needing renovation, or even all three.

So, when bidding on Priceline, expect the worst room in the least desirable area of the zone and set your bid accordingly. You then can only be pleasantly surprised.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 06:15 PM
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If you do your research carefully - on biddingfortravel.com and betterbidding.com, as well as on Priceline.com and tripadvisor.com - you can't be disappointed. If you're disappointed, then either you don't understand what area/hotels you're bidding for, you didn't read about the hotels carefully enough, or you overbid.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 06:29 PM
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I've been fairly lucky with my Priceline bids. You need to carefully review all the recent information on BiddingForTravel.com and place your best bid. The only time I was completely disappointed in my winning bid was when I needed to leave my house on short notice when my tile was being installed. I placed a bid without doing extensive research and felt comfortable with the hotels in the class/location I was bidding on. However, I got a hotel that was rather run down and they charged me extra because they consider themselves a "resort & spa". I fought the charge and got my $12 returned. The hotel met the criteria for a 3* Hotel because it had all the required amenities (i.e., restaurant onsite) but was in dire need of major renovations.

Other than this experience, I have always been pleased with the hotels I've received through Priceline.

I would never place a bid expecting to receive a certain hotel... you never know which one will accept your price.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 06:39 PM
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At the Wyndam Grand Bay in Coconut
Grove I would have been dissapointed
if I had paid the going rate-the lobby is nice, but the rooms not worth
200+. Got it on PL for $60 and for 1 night on the way to the Keys,it was fine (and really nice to be off that plane!)The staff was pretty snooty,
and I don't care if your staying for free-that is a hospitality no-no.

We have had very nice mini-escapes at the Lodge at Sonoma, a Marriot Renaissance property. They are happy
to take note our stay with Marriot Rewards. Everyone there is quite
delightful! PL helpds the travel budget
do "extra" duty, and I would use them again.

R5
Have paid
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 07:03 PM
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As a post-script to my previous post, I'd like to comment on hotels looking down on Priceline patrons. I've never had a hotel take that attitude with me. Maybe it's because I take the attitude that if they didn't want my business, they shouldn't have accepted my bid. If any hotel personnel ever treated me poorly during my stay, because I'm using Priceline or for some other reason, I'd take it up with a manager.

Actually, I wonder if the check-in personnel think I'm rather savvy for using Priceline and respect me for not paying "full price" for the room.
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Old Jan 9th, 2005 | 07:23 PM
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Heartburn, I'm trying to figure out what it is you're trying to say. Most of the examples above including mine refer to the response given when we complain about receiving a poor room. I don't see anyone talking about a clerk being rude to a Priceline buyer for no reason. If you've never been the victim of getting a poor room to begin with, then there's no reason you would have complained and no reason they would have "spoken down" to you, so obviously you wouldn't have experienced this.

Or are you suggesting that the hotels really wouldn't think of giving the Priceline buyers the worst rooms? If so, I want you to type these words and read them carefully before posting them with a straight face:
"I firmly believe that if a hotel is completely sold out and all rooms are full that they will give the worst rooms to the guests who booked direct at full price and give the better rooms to people who bought by Priceline."

Can you honestly say that?

Remember we're not talking about a hotel which has a lot of rooms available giving out the bad rooms to Pricline buyers as a matter of policy. Instead we're saying if there is no choice but to give someone the bad room, who do you think it is more likely to be?
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