I recently booked a weekend stay in a large midwestern metropolitan area with Priceline.com and saved a considerable amount of money (I paid $50 per night for a $120 per night room, a savings of $70 per night sounds good to me for a four star hotel chain). Nothing earth shattering here, but if you play you cards right you can game the system much easier than blindly naming your price.
Enter Better Bidding For Travel and other sites that aggregate user submitted winning bids. Users often submit what zone or area they bid on, what price bids won and failed, and their resulting hotel brand. This is incredibly valuable for people like you and me. It gives us an idea of what hotel locations have been won recently in a given area and what price we should start at bidding without low-balling too much. Had I checked Better Bidding first I would have known that I overpaid $5 from another user's bid a week before my trip. Not that I'm splitting hairs over $5 but you can understand that this could add up in a high rent area like Manhattan where the nightly room goes for considerably more.
Things to Consider Before Bidding:
- A standard Priceline room is double occupancy and does not specify smoking or non-smoking. You can contact the hotel directly after winning and specify your preference for a king bed or non-smoking, but from my experience it will never be guaranteed only noted.
- The steepest discounts are on 4 and 5 star properties simply because they have the most margin to work with in the first place.
- Be not afraid of the process, it is not as complicated as it may sound. Forums like Better Bidding have members who are particularly friendly and helpful for those who may be new to the game.