The Mercury News

Reserved one room, charged for two

- Christophe­r Elliott

DEAR TRAVEL TROUBLESHO­OTER

>> The Comfort Inn & Suites Knoxville West is charging me for two rooms, even though I had a reservatio­n for only one room. I need some help getting this sorted out.

I made the booking through Orbitz. When I checked in, a hotel representa­tive claimed that I had two rooms reserved. I explained that I had a reservatio­n for only one room. I called Orbitz, and a representa­tive assured me that I had a reservatio­n for only one room. But when I checked my American Express statement, I saw that the hotel had charged me for two.

I have been going back and forth with Orbitz and the hotel manager at the Comfort Inn. Orbitz sent me an email that claimed that both rooms were used. I contacted the hotel manager and explained that the second room was never occupied.

I have been going back and forth for months. I’m exhausted and do not know what else to do. Do you have any advice?

— Lora Crumb, Branchvill­e, New Jersey

ANSWER >> This should have been sorted out a long time ago by your online travel agency. It may not be immediatel­y clear how your single reservatio­n multiplied, but if Orbitz told you that you had only one reservatio­n, it should have ensured that that was the case.

I contacted the hotel, and it insisted that Orbitz sent it two reservatio­ns under your name. That could have been a system glitch, or you inadverten­tly might have pushed the “book” button twice. If you did book twice by mistake, you never received a confirmati­on of a second booking. It’s a mystery.

But I keep coming back to Orbitz’s assurances to you that you had just one reservatio­n. You even had that in writing — in your online reservatio­n. And that really should have been sufficient to clear up this mess.

Instead, Orbitz and Comfort Inn played ping-pong with $426 of your hard-earned money. Each blamed the other, but no one was willing to refund your money. Comfort Inn might have tried to help, but it did exactly what it was supposed to: It received two reservatio­ns, which it honored. The hotel received a reservatio­n and believed it would be paid $426.

A brief, polite email to the customer-service managers at Orbitz (owned by Expedia) or Choice Hotels might have moved your case in the right direction. I list their names, numbers and email addresses on my consumer-advocacy site: www. elliott.org/company-contacts/ expedia/ and www.elliott.org/ company-contacts/choice-hotelsinte­rnational/.

I contacted Orbitz on your behalf. It refunded your $426.

Christophe­r Elliott is ombudsman for National Geographic Traveler magazine. Read more travel tips on his blog, elliott.org, or email him at chris@elliott.org.

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