Baltimore Sun Sunday

$46-a-night Booklyn lodging was too good to be true

- By Christophe­r Elliott

A: You want my opinion? I think Booking.com should honor its price. Your dilemma is a little bit like a Chinese finger trap. Booking.com won’t let you cancel your reservatio­n because the deadline for making a change has passed. At the same time, it’s almost tripled the price of your accommodat­ions. That doesn’t seem fair.

This isn’t an obvious “fat-finger fare” — the kind where someone at the online agency makes a decimal-point error, giving away $400 hotel rooms for $40. I think $46 looked like a terrific price, and the Booking.com reservatio­n was a contract for that room — a deal it should honor.

OK, some of you skeptics are probably thinking, “$46 in Brooklyn? Get outta here!” And in the past, I’ve taken a dim view of readers who take advantage of rate errors. If you’d made several reservatio­ns

I’d like your opinion on an email we received about a lodging reservatio­n in Brooklyn, N.Y., I made through Booking.com.

I made the reservatio­n more than a month ago at Apartment Reggae Den, a vacation rental property. Yesterday, I received an email that Booking.com had the wrong rate posted on its website. The price wasn’t $46 a night, but $125 a night.

When Booking.com accepted my reservatio­n, I stopped looking for other locations and now have few options in the area I needed lodging. Booking.com seems to not allow any changes from the customer’s end regarding this reservatio­n. What should I do? at that rate and told all of your friends to do the same thing, I might send this Booking.com price-error case to the “rejected” file. But this was just you, looking for a good deal on lodging in New York.

Your online travel agency should have worked with you to resolve this issue. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the Booking.com executives on my consumer-advocacy site: www.elliott.org/company -contacts/booking-com/.

I reviewed the paper trail between you and Booking.com. It turns out Booking.com would have allowed you to cancel this reservatio­n, so you had the option of getting a full refund and finding alternate accommodat­ions. But was this a Booking.com price error? In fact, it wasn’t. The Reggae Den is responsibl­e for entering the correct rate informatio­n on Booking.com, according to the booking site.

“It is not Booking.com that owns this property and therefore cannot honor any reservatio­n that was made with an obvious error in rates,” a representa­tive told you in an email. “You will not be able to find a onebedroom apartment in any of the five boroughs for $46 per night. These rates are obviously wrong and therefore not binding.”

I wasn’t happy with that answer, so I contacted Booking.com on your behalf. It apologized to you and offered a $150 voucher good for a future booking, which you accepted. I hope you enjoy your stay in New York.

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