9:26 PM Bid on Hotel Rooms: Beat the Bidding System | ||||
#bidding for travel # Bid on Hotel Rooms: Beat the Bidding SystemIt sounds complicated, but it s fairly simple -- and effective -- to re-bid on hotel rooms once you get the hang of it. Hotels on Priceline are rated by quality using a star system. Lowest quality hotels are 1 star, and highest quality (resorts) are 5 stars. Herein lies the key to free re-bidding: not all zones have hotels in every quality category. What does that mean? Simple. Imagine you are looking for a 4-star hotel in the zone closest to the airport. Your bid on hotel rooms is rejected. You d like to bid again with a slightly higher price for the same hotels, but Priceline won t allow that. So you locate a zone in the same city (perhaps across town) that does not have any 4-star hotels in it, raise your bid price, and try again. Continue Reading Below Adding a new zone to your bid qualifies you for the free re-bid Priceline offers. And, since the new zone you ve chosen doesn t contain any 4-star hotels, you will not be stuck with a hotel in that zone. It s important to remember when using this system to raise your bid price with the free re-bid. Otherwise, adding the new zone will do you no good; your new offer will be an exact duplicate of your previous offer, and will be rejected again. So, how do you find out which zones have which star quality levels? It s easy -- in fact, Priceline will tell you. Start over as if you were creating a new bid. Once you get to the screen which lists all the zones in a particular city, choose one and select Next. On the next page, you will be allowed to choose a star level from the levels listed. If the zone you ve selected has 4- or 3-star hotels listed as a choice, use your browser s Back button to try again and select another zone. (For this trick to work, make sure you only select one zone at a time.) Once you find a zone that has no 3- or 4-star hotels listed, you ve found the dummy zone you can use. Start your re-bid and add this dummy zone to your offer. When using the free re-bid system, always double-check to make sure the dummy zone you re using does not contain any hotels in your star quality range -- even if you ve bid in this city before. Zones -- and the hotels included in them -- are subject to change daily, so you will want to confirm that your dummy zone is still empty of the star quality hotels you are requesting. Questions? Having success bidding? Can t get an offer accepted? Post a message in our Bidding for Travel forum ! Update: A reader adds, There is one important caveat that you did not mention (probably because you didn t know). When you are checking for no 4 star zones you have to make sure that the zone you are checking doesn t have a little palm tree next to it. The palm tree indicates that there are resorts in that area. You may check the spot and see there are no four star hotels, but when you go to bid and include that new location, they may end up sticking you at a resort. I just got caught by this while booking a place in Vegas. I wanted a four star on the strip. I went back and forth a few times, including other locations. I ended up including Henderson which showed no four stars, but my bid was accepted by a resort in the area, certainly not my intention. Not that it s a big deal in this case, it is a nice place and it s only 17 miles from the strip. But I could see some of your readers ending up getting stuck in a bad situation because of this little detail. Thanks for the tip!
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