What's the book corporate America doesn't want you to read? Find out now -- or you could get scammed.

A government rate for a weekend stay?

December 9, 2007

Question: I can’t get my hotel to honor a rate it confirmed, and I could use a little help.

I recently called the Hampton Inn Asheville to reserve a room for two nights so I could attend a database software training class on federal government travel orders. I asked for, and received, Hampton Inn’s version of the government rate, which was $81 a night. A reservations agent gave me a confirmation number.

In a separate phone call, a colleague attending the same training class also made a reservation at the Hampton Inn and received the same rate and a confirmation number. Several days before the class, my colleague got a phone call from Hampton Inn with some bad news. Apparently we’d both been offered the wrong rate. The new rate for Friday night was $149. The representative asked my colleague to pass the news along to me.

I contacted Hilton Hotels, which owns Hampton Inn, and was told that someone from the Hampton property in Asheville would contact me. But when I got the call from Hampton, the representative refused to adjust the rate, insisting that no one travels on government business on Friday or Saturday. I can assure you that this is not correct.

I have not yet canceled my reservation, but I find it odd that I can go online and get a $114-a-night rate for Friday. What would you advise me to do?

– Cheryl McClure, Atlanta

Answer: Don’t cancel your reservation. Hampton Inn needs to honor the rate it offered you and your colleague when you phoned.

This isn’t a “fat finger” rate — a price that’s too good to be true. It appears to be a legitimate government rate that was withdrawn for reasons that aren’t entirely clear.

It should be obvious to even the janitor at the Hampton Inn that the government doesn’t stop working on the weekend. And besides, there are ways to confirm that someone is traveling on government business. Why not ask for an ID, for starters? I’m sure you would have been happy to show yours to the desk clerk when you checked in.

Instead, your government rate was taken away and replaced with what looks like the hotel’s undiscounted room rate, also known as the “rack rate.”

Come on.

You could have done one of two things. First, you might have phoned the Hampton Inn in Asheville and spoken with a manager. A one-minute conversation would have cleared this whole matter up. Second, you could have just shown up at the property with a printout of your confirmed room rate and insisted that the hotel honor it, even though you knew it didn’t want to. A manager would have been called and after a one-minute conversation, I’m sure your rate would have been adjusted.

Oh, there’s a third option that I almost forgot about: Me.

I contacted Hampton on your behalf, and it turns out the hotel goofed. According to a phone call you received from a manager, the hotel never should have changed your rate. The manager blamed the screw-up on a trainee, and the hotel reset your rate to $81 a night.

Or so the manager said. In fact, when you checked out of the hotel, you were presented with an invoice for $149 a night. Once again a manager was called, and your rate was finalized at $81.

Christopher Elliott is the author of Scammed: How to Save Your Money and Find Better Service in a World of Schemes, Swindles, and Shady Deals. Critics have called it “eye-opening” and “inspiring” — it’ll “grab your attention and won’t let go.” Order your copy now on Amazon, Barnes & Noble or iTunes.

9 comments

  • http://blog.kango.com Kango Suz

    Elliott,
    This is what I love the BEST about reading your site, hearing about the times when you go to bat for your readers and get results. Thanks so much for sticking up for readers when we can’t get the industry to listen to us!

  • Gretchen

    Why would you have bothered? There are plenty of other hotel rooms in the Asheville area that would have been happy to receive your business and treat you like a valued customer at a rate much lower than that…

  • Adele

    The same thing happened to me in a hotel in Tucson. They decided to change the government rate and did not inform me until I arrived. The manager had already left for the night. I disputed the rate with the manager the next day. He said it was “hotel policy” to change the government rate, even if a confirmed rate had been quoted in a reservation. I got nowhere with the hotel. However, I made a complaint with my credit card company, and I was able to get a refund.

  • Leo

    I had a similar thing happen to me at a Hampton last year. I was attending a trade show in Chicago and the show rate was $189/night. I went through the HHonors website for my reservation and it was $139/night.

    When I get to the hotel, they had trade show stuff to give out and when I checked in, the person changed my rate to the $189. I then balked at the change and had to speak with a manager, then the Hilton Diamond Desk to get it resolved. Eventually, it was resolved by the Diamond Desk and the manager and they even comped me one night out of the five I was staying there for.

  • Mayr Dillon

    I am a government employee and book the government rate on week-ends, etc. The only thing I’ve ever been asked (rarely) is to see my id.

    Shame on Hampton!!

  • Richard

    Just to note that the government rate is not a guarantee, but a courtesy. It’s a marketing strategy that hotels use to attract government travelers, and there is no contractual obligation between the hotel and the GSA (the government’s travel arm). If a hotel is nearly full, they’re free to charge the “market rate,” whatever that may be – that said, however, most managers have been willing to offer the government rate, because it’s better than having an unsold hotel room in your inventory at the end of the night. Some will even extend the rate if you decide to extend your stay for personal travel.

  • Jason Zions

    A hotel absolutely can say “We’re sold out of gov rate rooms for that night” at the time of the reservation. But if they give you a reservation for a gov rate, they have to honor it.

    Government employees are required to stay at hotels that offer gov rates, even if lower non-gov rates are available elsewhere. Part of the deal between hotels and the GSA (and there are deals, as I understand it) is that gov’t employees will actually stay there instead of at the competition which doesn’t offer gov rate.

  • Francine Goldberg

    I’ve stayed at some 5-star resort hotels on weekends on a government rate. Most of them are perfectly happy to charge that rate and fill up their rooms. And most have no problem if it’s leisure travel. So long as you have the government ID, they are happy to oblige. I got a wonderful $129/night on a $349/night room at the Vinoy Renaissance (Marriott) in St. Petersburg last fall. It was a beautiful hotel and I always wanted to stay there when I passed it before. What a nice experience. And because of the nice rate, I used many of the (costly) hotel facilities rather than going out or elsewhere. So it’s a win-win situation for the hotel. They don’t have that empty room and they have more revenue than they would have had.

  • Bill

    wife and I are taking a leisure trip to Ithaca and staying at the Hampton Inn. Made reservations and received confirmation on MARCH 1, 2011 for a government rate of $102/night for this weekend. Just received a call yesterday from them that our trip scheduled in 3 days will be charged $169/night because they don’t honor government rates on weekends! Are you kidding me-they tell us this 3 days before we are leaving? We booked in March. Tried to complain to 1800hampton but they referred us right back to the hotel. They said the general manager will call me in 3 business days….probably after our trip is over. Any help out there?

Previous post:

Next post: