Hotels.com (UK)
Thread Starter

Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,652
Likes: 138
From: 50+ north
Hotels.com (UK)
Would appreciate advice from anyone who can provide it. Have made a booking with Hotels.com in Uk. The proposed departure date from my Bali Hotel is on a religious holiday when travel outside hotel is prohibited. This was not revealed to me until the booking confirmation was received. I therefore tried to reduce my stay by one day and get a partial refund. All I repeatedly get from their customer service is "the Hotel has a strict no refund condition for the booking". They are not interested in discussing the circumstances why I am requesting the refund. Can anyone advise me how I can pursue this in the UK?

Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 1,064
Likes: 8
From: Either the back of a sim, or wherever Crewing send me.
I suspect that you won't be able to. Hotels.com differentiate between the hotels they sell that you can cancel prior to arrival and those that you can't, sounds like you picked a hotel that you can't. I would imagine you have to chalk it up to experience unfortunately.
Thread Starter

Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,652
Likes: 138
From: 50+ north
It always was a non-refundable booking. The problem was that when I made the booking with my original check out date Hotels.com did not reveal to me that I could not leave the hotel because of the religious festival which prohibits travel on my check out date. Only once I made the booking and paid did they tell me on the confirmation that travel was prohibitive.
As the booking was made in UK I need to ascertain how I pursue a refund as the booking was accepted without the travel ban being revealed at the time of booking. I believe that this contravenes UK trading law.
As the booking was made in UK I need to ascertain how I pursue a refund as the booking was accepted without the travel ban being revealed at the time of booking. I believe that this contravenes UK trading law.
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 3
Likes: 5
From: Wor Yerm
You send them an email. Mention they failed to disclose facts relating to the booking, facts which are relevant because of a religious festival and that you are not a local and cannot be expected to know about untypical travel restrictions. I believe therefore this counts as a misrepresentation. If you get no joy, you go to your credit card company and make a claim under Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974.
Best of luck,
PM
Best of luck,
PM





