Search Results for: hotel vouchers
Warning! Don’t be blinded by these flash sales
The deal-of-the-day site LivingSocial was offering a week at an all-inclusive resort on the pricey Caribbean for just $1,658.
What to do about the travel industry’s timeout clauses
A casual observer might have thought that Anthony LaMesa was booking a last-minute JetBlue Airways ticket from New York to Cancun, Mexico, on a whim, perhaps to escape the frigid winter weather.
How travelers can challenge the industry’s “act of God” excuses
It’s the time of year when the travel industry likes to play the weather card. Couldn’t check into your hotel? Blame it on that distant tornado. Flight canceled? It’s the hurricane’s fault, even though it’s hundreds of miles away. A big repair bill for your rental car? Thank last week’s hailstorm.
Is this a scam? A vacation package never received
The offer looked like an incredible bargain. For just $1,749, Judy Citko and her fiancé could fly from California to Florida and enjoy a three-day Caribbean “cruise and stay” package.
Did United offer me compensation for a rough night in the ballroom?
Amanda Ellis says she was “very upset” after her United Airlines flight from Honolulu to the Marshall Islands was canceled because of a sick crewmember.
My cruise line left me stranded in Naples — is this voucher the best they can do?
Judith Abramson’s western Mediterranean cruise on the Oceania Marina last April did not end well. After a sudden illness, the ship’s doctor decided she needed to go to the hospital, and she was unceremoniously disembarked in Naples, Italy, under less than ideal circumstances, she says.
His SeaWorld vacation is sunk — where’s his refund?
If you want to save a little money on your next SeaWorld vacation, booking a package might be a good move. That’s what Jim Strasbaugh thought when he found a two-day package at SeaWorld Orlando through SeaWorld Vacations.
United Airlines promised me two first class tickets — where are they?
In the customer service world, a first-class, roundtrip ticket anywhere the airline flies is the ultimate mea culpa — an airline’s way of saying, “We’re really sorry.”