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If your going on a vacation, do you base your hotel stay off ratings, name brand or price?
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:27 pm
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:27 pm
I personally have never stayed in a ritz carlton hotel and was wondering is it even worth it to pony up the money per night they ask?
typically its more than double any average 4 star hotel
typically its more than double any average 4 star hotel
This post was edited on 12/11/18 at 12:27 pm
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:27 pm to Reda LSU
location
all i need the room for is to sleep and shower
all i need the room for is to sleep and shower
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:28 pm to Reda LSU
A combo of ratings and price. Anything above 7.5 on booking is good enough for me (for the average trip).
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:29 pm to Reda LSU
Depends on the vacation. Where am I going? How long will I be there? How often will I be in the room? What's the area like? Is this centered around a celebration? Have I been here before? Who all am I with?
This post was edited on 12/11/18 at 12:30 pm
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:29 pm to cgrand
quote:
location
all i need the room for is to sleep and shower
Pretty much this. Usually if I’m in a hotel I didn’t come to that city to chill at the hotel.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:29 pm to Reda LSU
If an average rating is below 4.5 out of 5 stars, I try to look elsewhere.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:30 pm to Reda LSU
I blind book hotels if I'm traveling for leisure, which means you don't know what you're getting until it is paid for but you pick the area of town and the star level. There's a bit of learning curve/strategy to this, but you can get some nice stuff for less than $100 if you play it right.
I've stayed in La Pavillon for $60 three times now.
I'm staying at Le Meridien in 2 weeks for $66.
As long as you get 3-star or above, you make sure you don't pick any sketchy areas, and it has 80% or more positive ratings, you're all good.
I've stayed in La Pavillon for $60 three times now.
I'm staying at Le Meridien in 2 weeks for $66.
As long as you get 3-star or above, you make sure you don't pick any sketchy areas, and it has 80% or more positive ratings, you're all good.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:31 pm to GetCocky11
Location and price. If it’s an overnight on the road then anywhere near restaurants and near the interstate is fine. I have stayed in some dumps traveling for work. Our annual summer trip we stay at the same resort and use discount rates through our retirement system on when to go.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:31 pm to Reda LSU
Location is the most important. I tend to stay in the nicest place I can that’s also closest to what I want to do.
If I’m traveling for work I tend to just pick something next to whatever airport I’m at.
If I’m traveling for work I tend to just pick something next to whatever airport I’m at.
This post was edited on 12/11/18 at 12:32 pm
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:31 pm to Reda LSU
Been a few years since I paid for a hotel with money. Generally I use whatever credit card points get me the best deal. A lot of the times it is Hyatt with UR points.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:32 pm to Reda LSU
I usually look at the location, ratings and reviews
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:33 pm to LouisianaLady
quote:
I blind book hotels if I'm traveling for leisure, which means you don't know what you're getting until it is paid for but you pick the area of town and the star level. There's a bit of learning curve/strategy to this, but you can get some nice stuff for less than $100 if you play it right.
Is there a certain site you use?
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:33 pm to 0
quote:
I tend to stay in the nicest place I can that’s also closest to what I want to do.
OT Baller.
Location definitely matters and I forgot to include that in the OP
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:34 pm to Reda LSU
Lots of factors go into my decision, but most importantly is which chain I have the most reward points built up and what my status is with said chain.
For a while I was diamond with Hilton and was using their properties. Marriott sent me an offer to sign up for their credit card for 100,000 point bonus, so I recently had used them more
For a while I was diamond with Hilton and was using their properties. Marriott sent me an offer to sign up for their credit card for 100,000 point bonus, so I recently had used them more
This post was edited on 12/11/18 at 12:37 pm
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:34 pm to Reda LSU
ratings, location, and price are all huge factors. I have found that the difference in quality between a place like a Motel 6 and a Best Western is tremendous, but the difference between a Best Western and a Ritz isn't that big as far as my enjoyment is concerned. Ratings are important in order to assess the likelihood that the bed will be comfortable and the unit clean, as those are the two most important factors for a decent night's sleep.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:37 pm to Reda LSU
I use all 3.
90% of the time it's an ihg property, then I look at location vs price.
90% of the time it's an ihg property, then I look at location vs price.
Posted on 12/11/18 at 12:40 pm to wildtigercat93
RateDrop.com will show the Priceline Express, Hotwire Hot Rate, or Priceline Bidding. I almost always end up using the Hotwire Hot Rate, though, so I just go directly to their site now.
A few caveats: You absolutely cannot cancel for pretty much any reason. Only time I've been able to was when we had the flooding in 2016. You are charged immediately upon booking. I've never ever had an issue with 3rd party, but note that 3rd party is always slightly risky if shite was to happen like the hotel being full.
It is often the cheapest option, but not always. I use it mostly in New Orleans. For example, I just booked Savannah and the blind rate wasn't any cheaper than a huge 2-bedroom house on AirBnb so I went that route.
A few caveats: You absolutely cannot cancel for pretty much any reason. Only time I've been able to was when we had the flooding in 2016. You are charged immediately upon booking. I've never ever had an issue with 3rd party, but note that 3rd party is always slightly risky if shite was to happen like the hotel being full.
It is often the cheapest option, but not always. I use it mostly in New Orleans. For example, I just booked Savannah and the blind rate wasn't any cheaper than a huge 2-bedroom house on AirBnb so I went that route.
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