12:05pm March 10, 2010 – Winner Announcement of Hilton “Be My Guest” certificate is comment # 14 from Flint, Michigan based on a Random.org pick. Congratulations. And again thanks from Loyalty Traveler to Hilton Hotels, Randy Petersen and BoardingArea.com, and all the entrants who had a dream. One of you got that dream. All the rest of you — pay up or wait for the next giveaway. And stick around BoardingArea.com. You may not get that room or flight for free, but you’ll certainly get all you pay for and more.

***[original post below]

Loyalty Traveler is giving away a Hilton “Be My Guest” free night certificate valid “for one night of complimentary lodging (room and tax only) at any participating Hilton Hotel in the United States”. Expiration date is June 30, 2010. Thanks to Hilton and BoardingArea.com for providing this gift to me to give to one of you.

Entry is easy.

Loyalty traveler entry procedure:

  1. Leave a comment on my blog before 12 noon Pacific time, Wednesday, March 10 using an email address where you can be reached if you are the winner.
  2. Important: Name the Hilton brand hotel nearest your home in your comment. (For example: for me it is the Hilton Garden Inn, Monterey, CA)
  3. One entry per person please.

One comment, selected at random, will be chosen as the winner and notified Wednesday, March 10. 

Santa Clara Hilton

It’s January 7 and the Hilton HHonors “Have a Free Night on Us” promotion registration is a working link. Already there is confusion and disappointment being expressed on FlyerTalk. There are non-participating properties in the USA and Canada, but the hotel exclusion list is relatively small. There is no restriction mentioned in the promotion terms regarding property redemption exclusions with the free night certificate . There is a list of non-eligible room rates which is already creating confusion among members.

The basic promotion offer is a certificate for a free night at any Hilton brand in the system after every four stays or 10 nights through March 31, 2010. The certificate is valid for one year from issue date. You must register for the promotion before your hotel stays. There is a maximum of three free night certificates per member during the promotion.

Here is my initial Loyalty traveler post from Jan 3 on the Hilton free night promotion.

My initial take on the free night promotion rules is the January Sale rates in the Americas will count as eligible stays for the free night promotion, but the international 50% off January Sale rate will not count as eligible stays for the free night promotion.

What appears to be clear is the January Weekend Sale for 50% off international properties in Europe, Middle East, Africa, and Asia/Pacific in 2010 is a rate plan not eligible for the Free Night Promotion. Rates I checked in London show this rate plan as PRO9SW. The rate plan exclusion list shows PRO9SW as ineligible for the free night promotion.

*********

Update: HHonorsRepresentative posted on FlyerTalk, January 7, the international January Sale 50% rates, PRO9SW rate will be eligible for the free night promotion and these are the points made by HHonorsRepresentative today.

1. All eligible stays from January 1 – March 31, 2010 will qualify for the offer regardless of when you register for the offer.
2. You do not have to book your stay during the offer period.
3. The January Sale & the Night on Us offers are combinable. The SRP code PR09SW for the Q1 Free Night offer was inadvertently included on the SRP exclusion list. We are working with the appropriate parties to have this removed from the exclusion list.
4. Third party rates do not apply.
5. The hotels that are listed as non participating, are the only properties that you will not received promotional credit for. All other properties worldwide are participating.
6. Reward stays will not count towards this offer this quarter.

************************

My checks of USA rates for the January Sale showed rate plan PGJS01 and this rate plan is not on the rate exclusion list for the free night promotion. A search of Hilton Colon Quito, Ecuador showed a rate plan PGJS02.

Advance Purchase rate plans I checked on Hilton.com are different codes than shown on the rate exclusion list as A01 and A41. It appears normal advance purchase rates found on Hilton reservations are eligible for the promotion. I am not a Hilton rate expert and these are just my initial findings from rate searches in the Americas and London.

This is a fluid situation with the details for the Free Night Promotion and live registration link only becoming active a few hours ago.

This story is subject to change as details and clarification from Hilton become available.

 

January Sale in the Americas Terms: (Hilton January Sale link)

I wrote about the January International Sale for 50% off at 220 hotels for 2010 weekends in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia/Pacific regions on Dec. 24.

Since then, Hilton rolled out a January sale for room discounts in the Americas. The good news is these rates appear eligible for the Free Night promotion. The bad news is rate discounts are not 50% like the international January sale.

  • The sale includes Hilton brand hotels in North America, Caribbean, Central and South America.

  • This is a nonrefundable, prepayment rate charged at time of booking.

  • Purchase must be made at least 3 days prior to stay.

  • Discount is based on Best Available Bed & Breakfast rate and varies by hotel brand.

  • 33% Hilton and Doubletree Hotels.

  • 30% Hilton Grand Vacations Hotels

  • 20% Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton Inn and Homewood Suites hotels

  • 15% Embassy Suites

  • No Conrad Hotels or Waldorf Astoria Collection January Sale discounts.

There is heated activity on the hotel loyalty front in these holiday weeks. Hilton, Marriott, Starwood, and IHG have announced 2010 promotions. Hyatt still has the best promotion of 2009 and you can take advantage of this offer through the month of January.

Hyatt Gold Passport “The Next Big Thing” promotion is incredible with combined promotion benefits for both points and miles. Oct. 1 2009 – Jan 31, 2010.

Hyatt Gold Passport promotion registration link.

1.       Earn a free night after every two stays. Loyalty Traveler Sep. 17

2.       Earn double elite stay credit. (Diamond membership in 13 stays or Platinum in 3 stays.)

3.       Earn 2,500 airline miles after every two nights until Dec 31, 2009. Loyalty Traveler Oct. 5

4.       Earn Hyatt Gold Passport G bonus with most hotel stays. Loyalty Traveler Nov 9

 

Starwood Preferred Guest up to 4x points

January 5 – April 15, 2010.

Registration required between January 5 and March 31, 2010.

SPG Promotion Link

 

Double base points (1 or 2 night stay) = 4 points/$1

Triple base points (3 night stay) = 6 points/$1

Quadruple base points (4 nights or more) = 8 points per $1

This promotion is combinable with other promotions. Elite bonuses are additional.

Loyalty Traveler Dec 18

 

 

Hilton HHonors free night after 4 stays or 10 nights

January 7 – March 31, 2010

 

Posted on FlyerTalk by HamptonInsider this promising HHonors promotion for a free night valid across the Hilton system after 4 stays or 10 nights. The promotion details are not released yet, so at this point the rumor is just a seemingly reputable insider pre-release on FlyerTalk. There will likely be some restrictions on hotel reward nights redemption and perhaps some hotel exclusions, but overall this may be a sign of a new style of promotion activity from Hilton HHonors.

 

The points increases in 2010 categories is not so bad a change if the HHonors program makes it easier to earn free nights with promotions like the current 25,000 points after 4 stays and what looks to be a free night offer coming in January.

The leisure traveler may find HHonors a lifestyle deal with their two-pronged approach to rewarding loyalty membership. HHonors may see a return of the HHonors points traveler who can earn some lucrative bonuses on hotel stays. Combine the points budget traveler with the big fish spender putting $40,000 on the HHonors co-branded credit card for complimentary HHonors Diamond elite annual membership.  The Diamond lifestyler from both ends of the economic spectrum can find good value with HHonors. Value gives a traveler reason to put more effort into a Hilton hotel choice.

 

Marriott Rewards

MegaBonus 25,000 to 60,000 points depending on offer and nights stayed.

Feb 1- April 30, 2010.

Members are receiving new Marriott Rewards 2010 Megabonus offers. Marriott targets members with different offers.

 

Marriott Rewards PointSavers Plus 10% discount or 15% discount for Gold and Platinum elite members.

There are still three weeks to book a discounted discount hotel nights reward with the special PointSavers offer through January 15, 2010.

Update January 5, 2010: My personal MegaBonus offer is a free night (category 1-4 hotel) after two stays. Limit of one free night may be earned and free night to be redeemed by August 31, 2010. This offer is essentially a 20,000 points value if used for a Category 4 night. I have no elite status with Marriott Rewards.

IHG Priority Club Rewards

1,000 bonus points per night or 200 bonus miles up to maximum 20,000 points or 4,000 miles (20 nights).

Priority Club Rewards Registration Link

20,000 points is a rather weak offer from IHG considering this is only 50% of the points needed for one free night at a top tier InterContinental Hotel costing 40,000 points. The points-hungry tactic with IHG is to play the promotion registration game with Priority Club Rewards. A member can average 5,000 to 8,000 points per night for stays in IHG brand hotels.

Skeptical?

Read this FlyerTalk thread.

December is the month for securing elite status. People in the know, those frequent guests and fliers making mattress runs and mileage runs this month, know that a few unnecessary hotel room nights or a few thousand miles of unnecessary airline flights are truly necessary. Some loyalty travelers are frantically booking travel solely for the purpose of attaining the magic threshold of higher elite status in 2010.

And it is magic when after 10 minutes waiting in the elite security line at the crowded airport, you barely get on your plane just before it taxies out of the gate. You reflect on the frazzled family who walked up to the elite check-in airport counter just in front of you, each parent cradling a crying toddler, with a hands-free wandering preschooler lagging behind dragging a backpack, a babystroller under Dad’s arm, two suitcases, two backpacks, and a purse.  You watched as you moved closer to the elite member check-in counter while the parents were steered away from the Star Alliance Gold members check-in line to the hopelessly long economy class general members’ line extending halfway down the terminal. They were supposed to depart on the same flight as you, but they hadn’t even arrived at the security zone as you passed through the detectors and rushed off to the gate. They are still waiting in some non-elite fliers’ line while you are comfortably seated in First Class as the plane heads toward the runway.

Elite level status has practical implications in the frequent flier world beyond upgrades and airport lounges.

I haven’t been on a plane in the past few months. I watched scenarios like I described here over a number of years when I traveled as a United Airlines Mileage Plus elite member. I flew over 100,000 miles a year for several years primarily as a means of flying comfortably and having the privilege to hang out at airport lounges during international flights.

Joe Sharkey has a piece posted this week on his blog, Joe Sharkey At Large, “Continental Airlines is the Latest Airline to Diss Lower-Level Elite-Status Customers”. His piece is about how Continental Airlines offers enhancements to the most frequent fliers in the 100,000 flight miles per year category and new super-tier called Presidential Platinum elite for the cream of the Platinum fliers.

Flying 100,000 miles is expensive for a leisure traveler. I held United 1K for a couple of years with less than $2,500 in spending on flights annually, but then there was another $1,500 or so for my wife’s flights. And then add another $4,000 to $5,000 for lodging, and then add daily expenses when traveling. 

$4,000 to $5,000 in airfare was one expense I had to cut back, about 30% of my annual travel budget, to have some money available to put into Loyalty Traveler business expenses. Loyalty Traveler was founded as a business for explaining the value of elite status with travel loyalty programs and ironically I had to give up elite status air travel to conserve resources for the business. I hope to get back to a much higher level of air travel in the next year or two.

Right now my focus is maintaining high elite status in a couple of hotel programs – Hyatt Gold Passport and Starwood Preferred Guest – for my hotel travel. I just suffer like the masses when I have to get on a plane.

Ed Perkins wrote a piece on SmarterTravel.com, “Dollars Trump Miles as a Measure of Airline Loyalty”. Ed had an issue with upgrading a United flight using miles. He could not get an advance confirmation of the upgrade.

My experience of traveling around the world as a United 1K was a blast when I could buy a $600 ticket from California to Singapore, upgrade my ticket to a business class seat with a systemwide certificate (SWU), hang out at the international lounge in SFO before the flight, and then pop into the United Red Carpet Club at Narita Airport Tokyo for a free shower and a couple of glasses from the automatic beer dispenser. My cheap economy ticket also allowed me to earn 40,000 to 50,000 redeemable miles and 18,000 to 36,000 elite qualifying miles depending on promotions.

The problem with all that lovely treatment as a United 1K is that travel with my wife Kelley wasn’t always as fun. I’m not talking about a need for Tiger Woods entertainment without the wifey. I am talking about the fact that my United Airlines Mileage Plus elite status regularly provided upgrades for me, domestic and international. However, Kelley’s low level elite status, and sometimes even as a Premier Executive, frequently did not allow her to clear the upgrade list. We often traveled separately on the same plane to Europe with me in her assigned economy class seat and her in my upgraded Business Class seat.

Mom & Dad’s Florida Vacation

My parents have learned the value of Starwood Preferred Guest elite status – especially since they do not have it. This morning I received a call from my mom vacationing in Florida. Their hotel travel tally so far is three Starwoods and a Hilton in Florida. I asked them to take pictures of the view from each bedroom window at their hotels.

Hotel websites are generally good about photos of the hotel entrance, the lobby, restaurants, and pool.

Hotel websites rarely show a prospective guest the view from the less desirable side of the hotel. I am struck by the number of times I stay at a hotel and receive the preferred view and think this was a good deal. And I consider all those people I see coming out of their room located on the other side of the hallway and I wonder, “Do you feel like you’ve been cheated with this hotel stay?”

So my mom tells me they had a nice size room at a Sheraton in Fort Lauderdale, but faced the parking lot for the multi-night stay. Then, it was the Sheraton in Key West at a resort property on the beach, but their room was not facing the beach side of the hotel. Then, her description of the room in Coral Gables was “nicely furnished, but the room was miniscule.” She said the rooms are nothing like I get when I stay at Starwood Hotels.

“Elite Status” is my Two Word Response

Earning elite status with a hotel chain is really a much easier affair than airline frequent flier programs. Playing the 100,000 mile game with airlines is a matter of either several long-haul international trips or a whole lot of domestic flying. Hotel loyalty high-level elite-status is something many travelers can earn without even leaving town. You will appreciate your effort when you take that $3,000 beach resort vacation and spend the week looking at the beach from your hotel room window and balcony.

Here is the view from my room when I stayed at the Westin Mission Hills near Palm Springs, California.

Westin Mission Hills - Room with a View

Westin Mission Hills - Room with a View

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I received an upgrade on my Cash & Points stay to a golf course view preferred room. A general member of SPG on the same rate would be more likely to have received a room with this type of view across the parking lot.

Westin Mission Hills Resort - the other side of the hotel
Westin Mission Hills Resort – the other side of the hotel

 

Stays Count Double through January 31, 2010 with Hyatt Gold Passport

 

 

 

(The Next Big Thing registration required)

Hyatt Gold Passport is offering double stay credit for elite status through January 31, 2010. Elite status is based on paid stays completed in a calendar year. This means you can earn Hyatt Gold Passport Platinum level elite membership with just 3 stays in January or Diamond elite with 13 stays. The elite status you earn with Hyatt Gold Passport in January 2010 during stays count double will remain valid for over two years through February 2012.

Between fast-track elite status and Costco Hyatt Check Certificates at a 20% discount, the cost to earn high elite Diamond status with Hyatt can readily be accomplished for under $1,000 in many places while earning free nights for a fantastic February or March 2010 resort vacation. Check out your local Hyatt Place hotel rates. You can even go upscale Hyatt at a bargain with low January rates in many locations. The Hyatt Regency San Francisco was over $250 per night for most of summer 2009 and is less than half that rate for most weekends in January 2010. San Diego hotels are an incredible bargain right now.

Starwood Preferred Guest instant SPG Gold elite for New Members

Starwood Preferred Guest has offered a “stays count double” promotion every year for the past several years. Take advantage of the offer if it comes around next year and you can set yourself up with high-level elite-status.

Seriously, when you are spending a couple of thousand dollars for a vacation, a little bit of annual hotel planning can put you in that beach resort hotel on the beach side of the hotel rather than the resort view of the parking lot.

If you are new to Starwood Preferred Guest and you would like to receive instant SPG Gold elite membership, valid through February 2011, then just send me an email ricgarridolt@gmail.com. With my SPG Platinum member referral, you can be registered for 1,000 bonus points per night ($35 value) at Starwood Hotels through March 31, 2010 and you will receive an instant upgrade to SPG Gold Elite membership. And I get 1,000 points if you actually stay in a Starwood Hotel by March 31. A win-win-win deal for you, me, and Starwood.

Hotel Loyalty Program Links:

Hyatt Gold Passport “The Next Big Thing” Promotion

Hyatt Gold Passport Platinum elite benefits (lower-tier elite)

Hyatt Gold Passport Diamond elite benefits (higher-tier)

Starwood Preferred Guest Gold elite benefits

Starwood Preferred Guest Platinum elite benefits

Loyalty Traveler posts:

Passports with Purpose Win 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport points

Earn 2,500 airline miles with every two nights at Hyatt brand hotels (Oct. 5, 2009)

Hyatt Faster Free Nights + Stays Count Double promotion analysis Oct.1 – Jan 31, 2010 (Sep 19, 2009)

Hyatt Gold Passport Enhancements – And they really are enhancements (April 2, 2009)

 

Stay at SpringHill Suites for two consecutive paid nights Wednesday through Sunday and receive a 3rd night free. Book your stay by November 22 for stays through December 13.

A free Thymes Bath Set gift is also thrown in the bargain.

The way the terms are set requires at least a paid Friday or Saturday night, or both, for this free night special rate to work.

There are three combinations of nights you can book:

Wednesday-Thursday-Friday or

Thursday-Friday-Saturday or

Saturday-Sunday-Monday.

 

One of the best features of this offer is the ability to cancel up to the day of arrival for hotels I checked using the free night offer. Many, if not most, free night offers from hotel chains require full payment in advance with no refund option.

 

SpringHill Suites 3rd Night Free Promotion link.

 

SpringHill Suites brand

SpringHill Suites is Marriott’s mid-level extended-stay hotel brand and according to the latest 3rd quarter Marriott financial reports there are currently 241 SpringHill Suites properties with nearly 28,000 rooms.

The average daily rate for SpringHill Suites over the past summer was $98 per night. This rate is more than 10% less on average than summer 2008 rates.

SpringHill Suites fall in the middle of Marriott’s three main extended-stay brands.

Residence Inn (583 properties) is the more prevalent brand commanding a higher average daily rate of $112 per night.

TownePlace Suites is Marriott’s lower end extended-stay brand with 179 properties and an average daily rate of $80 per night.

springhill-suites-sign 

Promotion Analysis:

SpringHill Suites Sacramento-Roseville, CA

November 12-15, 2009 (Thursday-Friday-Saturday)

Corporate/Promotional Code BGS (3rd night free)

Cancellation policy: 6:00pm hotel time November 12

 

Studio, 1 King, Sofabed

$109.99 per night

$236.18 all-in for 3 nights (after 3rd night deducted at check-out).

Final room rate = $78.73 per night all-in with free night rate.

 

AAA rate for same dates:

$95 per night ($102.20 after tax)

$306.60 all-in for 3 nights on AAA rate ($70.42 more than free night rate)

Cancellation policy: 6:00pm hotel time November 12

 

Best Available Rate for same dates:

$99.99 per night ($107.49 after tax)

$322.47 all-in for 3 nights on BAR rate ($86.29 more than free night rate)

 

SpringHill Suites, Dallas Downtown-West End

November 12-15, 2009 (Thursday-Friday-Saturday)

Corporate/Promotional Code BGS (3rd night free)

Cancellation policy: 6:00pm hotel time November 12

 

Suite, 1 King, City View

$129.00 per night ($148.35 after tax)

$296.70 all-in for 3 nights

Final Room Rate: $98.90 per night all-in for 3rd night free rate

 

AAA rate for same dates:

$110 per night ($126.50 after tax)

$379.50 all-in for 3 nights  on AAA rate ($82.80 more than free night rate)

Cancellation policy: 6:00pm hotel time November 12

 

Courtyard at SpringHill Suites, Napa, California

SpringHill Suites, Napa, California

 

 

 

Sheraton Hotels is celebrating the $4 billion makeover of the Sheraton hotel brand with a free night giveaway for hotel stays on Friday, October 23 at 86 hotels around North America.

The contest is a giveaway for 2,023 free rooms at 86 Sheraton hotels for a free night. Friday night, October 23 is the only date valid for the free night stay.

You may submit one entry per day from Tuesday, October 6 through Friday, October 9.

Winners will receive instant notification of win. Contestants are limited to winning one free night during the contest.

 

Contest Link: sheraton.com/freenight

Contest Rules: http://sheraton.promo.eprize.com/freenight/display_page?page=rules

 

Participating Sheraton Hotels:

Hotel Prize Pool

# of Prizes

ARV

Total Prize Pool ARV

Sheraton Suites Galleria

50

$67

$3,350

Sheraton Birmingham

25

$159

$3,975

Sheraton San Diego Hotel & Marina

28

$175

$4,900

Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers

25

$179

$4,475

Sheraton Waikiki

20

$249

$4,980

Sheraton New York

15

$323

$4,845

Sheraton Boston

18

$269

$4,842

Sheraton Premiere at Tysons Corner

25

$69

$1,725

Sheraton Parsippany

25

$95

$2,375

Sheraton Suites Cypress Creek

25

$107

$2,675

Sheraton Grand Sacramento

15

$103

$1,545

Sheraton Overland Park

25

$79

$1,975

Sheraton Phoenix Downtown

25

$199

$4,975

Sheraton Nassau Beach

25

$139

$3,475

Sheraton Denver Downtown

25

$96

$2,400

Sheraton Dallas

50

$99

$4,950

Sheraton Centre Toronto

25

$188

$4,700

Sheraton Kauai

25

$179

$4,475

Le Centre Sheraton Montreal

25

$194

$4,850

Sheraton Gateway Toronto

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Suites Philadelphia

15

$101

$1,515

Sheraton Baltimore North Hotel

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Universal Hotel

20

$169

$3,380

Sheraton Suites Chicago Elk Grove

25

$79

$1,975

Sheraton Suites Country Club Plaza

5

$129

$645

Sheraton Suites Market Center

20

$99

$1,980

Sheraton Norfolk Waterside Hotel

25

$144

$3,600

Sheraton Tucson Hotel & Suites

25

$118

$2,950

Sheraton Parkway Toronto

25

$151

$3,775

Sheraton Colonial Boston North Hotel

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Suites Plantation

25

$139

$3,475

Sheraton Houston Brookhollow Hotel

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Gateway Los Angeles

25

$139

$3,475

Sheraton Milwaukee Brookfield Hotel

25

$87

$2,175

Sheraton Anchorage

25

$75

$1,875

Sheraton Cerritos Hotel

25

$89

$2,225

Sheraton Raleigh

10

$119

$1,190

Sheraton Commander Hotel

5

$479

$2,395

Sheraton Vancouver Guildford Hotel

2

$135

$270

Sheraton Reston

25

$75

$1,875

Sheraton San Jose

25

$84

$2,100

Sheraton Madison

20

$99

$1,980

Sheraton Westport Chalet

25

$85

$2,125

Sheraton Newark Airport Hotel

20

$89

$1,780

Sheraton Suites Akron/Cuyahoga Falls

20

$129

$2,580

Sheraton Providence Airport

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton National Hotel

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Richmond Park South

10

$129

$1,290

Sheraton Laval

25

$119

$2,975

Sheraton North Houston at George Bush Int. Airport

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Mahwah

25

$139

$3,475

Sheraton Portland Airport Hotel

25

$86

$2,150

Sheraton Denver West

25

$89

$2,225

Sheraton Sand Key Resort

25

$187

$4,675

Sheraton Charlotte Airport

10

$85

$850

Sheraton Anaheim

25

$129

$3,225

Sheraton Columbia Towne Center

25

$125

$3,125

Sheraton Edison Hotel

25

$89

$2,225

Sheraton Minneapolis West

25

$69

$1,725

Sheraton Minneapolis Midtown Hotel

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Tampa Riverwalk

25

$103

$2,575

Sheraton Jacksonville

20

$79

$1,580

Sheraton Orlando North Hotel

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Baltimore City Center

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Duluth Hotel

20

$175

$3,500

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center Hotel

25

$129

$3,225

Sheraton Fort Worth Hotel and Spa

25

$175

$4,375

Sheraton La Jolla

25

$109

$2,725

Sheraton Dallas North Hotel

25

$80

$2,000

Sheraton Harrisburg Hershey

25

$149

$3,725

Sheraton Herndon Dulles Airport Hotel

25

$67

$1,675

Sheraton Washington North Hotel

25

$109

$2,725

Sheraton Charleston Airport Hotel

25

$95

$2,375

Sheraton Austin Hotel

5

$199

$995

Sheraton Louisville Riverside Hotel

25

$125

$3,125

Sheraton Chicago Northbrook

20

$119

$2,380

Sheraton Arlington

10

$169

$1,690

Sheraton Baltimore Washington

50

$89

$4,450

Sheraton Suites San Diego At Symphony Hall

25

$165

$4,125

Sheraton Houston West

25

$79

$1,975

Sheraton Stonebriar

25

$89

$2,225

Sheraton Suites Columbus

20

$95

$1,900

Sheraton Gateway Atlanta

50

$79

$3,950

Sheraton Vancouver Airport

25

$149

$3,725

Sheraton Garden Grove-Anaheim South

25

$99

$2,475

Sheraton Suites Tampa

25

$119

$3,451

 

I gave Sheraton San Jose a try since I already plan to be in San Jose on Friday, October 23.

I did not win today.

Sheraton San Jose, California

Sheraton San Jose, California

Thousands of Hyatt Gold Passport members are half-way to a free night after checking out of a Hyatt Hotel today, October 1, 2009. Hyatt Gold Passport’s “The Next Big Thing” promotion is huge this year with Faster Free Nights, Stays Count Double, and bonus United miles available in combinable promotions.

In August, I was speaking with Barbara DeLollis of USA Today and discussing with her the current hotel loyalty program climate of 2009 as the best year in the past decade for hotel loyalty program promotions.

I’ve had the equivalent of $3,000+ in free hotel nights over the past six weeks with Starwood Preferred Guest staying at the St. Regis San Francisco, St. Regis Monarch Beach in Dana Point, W San Francisco, and Westin Napa Verasa. The hotel stays in May during Starwood’s Stay 2 times and earn a free weekend night only cost me $1,800 for the 16 hotel stays to earn 8 free nights.

And now Starwood is offering double elite credit for the remainder of 2009 for current SPG elite members. My SPG Platinum elite status provided added value, including full two-room suites at several hotels.

In August, I stayed in some low cost Holiday Inn hotels while traveling.  Priority Club’s Stay 2 nights and earn a free night allowed me to redeem a free hotel stay at the $300 per night InterContinental San Francisco. Too bad their promotion was limited to four free nights.

As a Hyatt Diamond elite member (25 stays or 50 nights) I recently received a free night credit for a Hyatt Place or Summerfield Suites to use by the end of 2009. As a SPG Platinum member (25 stays or 50 nights) I received a free night credit for any Starwood Hotel up to a Category 5 to use by the end of 2009. Ken Burns’ National Parks documentary has really stoked my interest in driving through Yosemite to stay at the Westin Monache in Mammoth Lakes this month before snow season begins.

I have stayed twice this past year for free at the Hyatt Carmel Highlands Inn. That is truly my staycation destination. The Highlands Inn is just a short 8 miles south of my home in Monterey. Kelley and I think it is one of the most beautiful locations in the world. Of course we are biased locals.

My point is not to espouse on my great travel trips.

I am simply a loyalty traveler and you can be one too.

Seriously, this Hyatt Faster Free Nights offer with Stays Count Double elite credit is truly an offer not to be missed.

And now that Gold Passport has opened Faster Free Nights to members who choose miles rather than points for earning preference, this promotion is a no-brainer if you are a United 1K member (and perhaps even if you are just a 1P, 2P, or general UA member like myself).

Whether your travel plans take you to London, Paris, Tokyo, Aruba, New York, or to a Hyatt resort just over the hill, the opportunity to earn free nights while attaining elite status and building up your frequent flier miles is an unprecedented hotel loyalty opportunity.

Priority Club had an earning limit of 4 free nights during their spring/summer promotion and SPG only allowed free nights to be redeemed for Friday, Saturday or Sunday this summer. Hyatt will allow you to book your winter 2010 7-night free vacation in a resort if you earn the nights and find the availability.

Here are some Loyalty Traveler tips for Hyatt Hotels Faster Free Nights planning:

1.       Chart the rates for your regional Hyatt Hotels and plan discretionary trips to hotels when rates are low. For example, during Starwood’s Free Weekend nights promotion I was able to stay in every Starwood Hotel in San Francisco and only once did I pay over $125 for a hotel room. This coming weekend most of these hotels are in the $300 per night range.

 

I find creating a spreadsheet helpful in plotting my stays during low rate nights at the Hyatt Hotels in my region. If you don’t have computer spreadsheet skills, then just draw out a grid on paper and track hotel rates. You will see patterns and with a little effort and research you can save hundreds of dollars on hotel rates.

 

Compare rates on Hyatt.com to online travel agency (OTA) rates. I like to check Kayak.com to get a meta-search view of rates. Hyatt’s Best Rate Guarantee allows a member to make a claim over the phone without having to book a room first. If you see a rate discrepancy with a lower rate on another OTA site and Hyatt approves your claim, then Hyatt will match the lower rate and take an additional 20% off. Discrepancies are more common than you might think.

 

Look for Gold Passport G Bonuses when making reservations. A simple check for a G Bonus link to the hotel you are planning to stay can increase your points earning by 1,000 to 2,000 points.

 

Hyatt Hotels Room Rates Spreadsheet

Hyatt Hotels Room Rates Spreadsheet

 

2.       Vary your stays to make the acquisition of free nights more pleasurable. Hyatt Place Fremont is my local cheap night hotel at just $70 all-in on most weekends, but no upgrades, fewer Diamond amenity points, and no lounge.

 

$20 more can put me in the Hyatt Santa Clara where there is a lounge, a breakfast restaurant, and the opportunity for nice upgrades.

 

In 2008 I only stayed in half of the Hyatt brand hotels in the San Francisco Bay region during an elite fast-track Stays Count Double promotion. This fall I will try and make at least one stay in the hotels I missed last year and check in with more Hyatt Hotels in southern California. I hear San Diego calling me.

 

3.       Be persistent and be flexible when it comes time to redeem your free nights. Starwood Lurker reported St. Regis Monarch Beach was the most requested free night property during the SPG promotion. I found availability over half the weekends in summer during my regular periodic checks. Sometimes availability lasted less than an hour. Westin Napa was a difficult property to get. I got it.

Hyatt Carmel Highlands is one of the more difficult hotels to get with FFN. I stayed twice this past year using FFN credits there.

Related Boarding Area blogger posts for Hyatt’s fall 2009 promotion:

One Mile at a Time – http://boardingarea.com/blogs/onemileatatime/2009/09/30/13500-united-miles-and-one-free-night-at-any-hyatt-for-every-second-stay-united-1ks-only/

View from the Wing – http://boardingarea.com/blogs/viewfromthewing/2009/10/01/the-best-hotel-promo-ive-ever-seen-13500-united-miles-and-a-free-night-for-every-two-cheap-one-night-hyatt-stays/

Loyalty Traveler – Analysis of Hyatt FFN and Stays Count Double (Sep 17, 2009)

Related Loyalty Traveler posts:

Loyalty Traveler – Carmel Highlands Inn review (Jan 5, 2009)

Loyalty Traveler – Hyatt Regency San Francisco Review and Stays Count Double Economic Rationale (March 22, 2008)

Country Inn & Suites is the most prevalent hotel brand of Carlson Hotels in the USA. Carlson Hotels is the chain behind Goldpoints Plus, the hotel loyalty program for the hotel brands of Radisson, Country Inn & Suites, Park Inn, and Park Suites. The Carlson Hotels chain has around 1,000 properties globally with Radisson Hotels being the chain’s upscale brand in many major US cities and cities around the world.

The Offer: Complete a two night stay at a Country Inn & Suites using the “FREESTAY” promotional rate between October 1 and November 30, 2009.

Promotion link and terms:

http://www.countryinns.com/Fall2009

 

The promotion actually works out to require a minimum of three non-discounted paid nights over two stays at Country Inn & Suites to receive one free night.

1.       Complete a two-night or longer stay at a Country Inn & Suites hotel using “FREESTAY” promotional rate between October 1 and November 30.

2.       Register your completed stay by December 9, 2009 at website link: www.freenightregistration.com

 

3.       Country Inn & Suites will send a free night voucher valid for one free night at a Country Inn & Suites on a future stay of two nights or longer hotel stay between December 15 and February 28, 2010.

4.       Redeem free night voucher at www.countryinns.com/freenightreward or by phone at 1-800-596-2375. Minimum 3-day advance reservation required.

 

Compared to other free night offers like Hyatt Gold Passport’s “The Next Big Thing” or Starwood Hotels’ Free Weekend Nights offer last summer, this is a cumbersome offer from Carlson Hotels requiring an unnecessary middle step.

Why isn’t the voucher automatically sent to the person who books a stay using the “FREESTAY” promotional code?

Requiring after-the-stay registration to receive the free night voucher is so retro – and not in a good sense.

This Country Inn & Suites Free Night promotion is a decent offer if you have travel plans that fit with two 2-night or longer stays at a Country Inn & Suites  hotel within the dates of this promotion. This promotion does not provide sufficient  incentive to go out of your way for this offer.

If you have the option of a Hyatt brand hotel during this time period, the terms are much more lucrative for the hotel frequent guest with a free night at any Hyatt worldwide after two stays (no 2-night minimum required) between October 1 and Jan 31, 2010. Link: http://goldpassport.hyatt.com/gp/en/index.jsp

Loyalty Traveler Hotel Loyalty Promotion Key Ranking = 2 Keys out of 5 for Country Inn & Suites free night offer.

Monday, Aug. 3 Update: The next Westin Bonaventure room giveaway promotion is scheduled for Tuesday, August 4 at 10am.

Unclear if all the future giveaways in August will be on Tuesdays?

*****

Westin Bonaventure in Los Angeles re-launched its Twitter and website free room giveaway today. Monday mornings thru August 31st at 9am PDT, Los Angeles local time, be one of the first 10 people to contact @thebonaventure and tweet #U.O.Me to win a free room. 40 rooms will also be available for free thru the website at this time.

There were some early morning glitches and the original 9amPDT start time for the giveaway was postponed an hour.

@thebonaventure on Twitter

@thebonaventure on Twitter

 

I eyed the tweet from @thebonaventure about 15 minutes before the giveaway.

Anyway, I set my atomic clock to make sure I had the correct time this giveaway since I sent my tweet 10 seconds too early the last time they ran this promotion in March.

And I still messed it up this time. I actually forgot to reply to @thebonaventure so my #U.O.Me went to nobody but my own page.

Not to fret. I know how to navigate my way around a hotel website better than posting rapid Twitter tweets so I headed over to http://www.thebonaventure.com/ and searched for the 40 rooms being offered for free on the website. No luck there finding the offer for free rooms.

My impromptu trip to LA for the weekend was put aside as I went on with my day of uploading some of my hotel room videos to YouTube.

Around 2pm I look at Twitter again and see @thebonaventure posted free rooms still available through the website. Now there actually was a special offer link that wasn’t there earlier today.

Westin Bonaventure Free Night link

Westin Bonaventure Free Night link

 

Westin Bonaventure Free Room Offer web link:

http://www.thebonaventure.com/give_away/

 

Twitter directions:

1.       Join Twitter

2.       On Monday morning, August 3, 2009 at 9am Los Angeles time leave a tweet like:

 

@thebonaventure #U.O.Me a free room please since I know how and when to tweet.

 

(You might want to keep the message shorter like “@thebonaventure #U.O.Me” so you beat out all the people going for those 10 rooms.)

Website directions: Go to http://www.thebonaventure.com/give_away/

 

Click the link “click here for a chance at a FREE night!” The rate will appear as $0.01 if a room is available. This is how the reservations page looks when a free room is available.

The web is a better way to secure your free room in my opinion. Last time they did this deal I easily found rooms through the website rather than gambling that I could be one of the first ten to contact the hotel through Twitter.

Westin Bonaventure Reservations free room page

Westin Bonaventure Reservations free room page

 

Twitter is becoming a regular source of good deals. It is in your travel interest to take the time to figure out this social media tool if you are not yet a follower or following Twit.

Next Westin Bonaventure free room giveaway is scheduled for Monday, August 3, 2009 at 9am PDT.

Follow me on Twitter @LoyaltyTraveler for quick news that generally doesn’t make my blog – particularly San Francisco area hotel deals.

http://twitter.com/LoyaltyTraveler

Hilton has a free night offer for 166 hotels in 44 different countries running through the summer months for participating hotels in Europe, Africa, Middle East, and Asia/Pacific regions.

Hotels in North America, Caribbean, Central and South America are excluded from this offer.

Offer:  Valid 7 days a week from for stays from May 1 thru September 30, 2009.

Rates include breakfast.

 

1 free night on a 3-night stay or

2 free nights on a 5-night stay or

3 free nights on a 7-night stay.

Free nights are valid for actual booked stay and do not carry-over to another stay.

Link to Hilton Extra Nights Free offer.

Loyalty Traveler Analysis:

I’ve been searching Paris Hotel rates for someone planning a week in the city of lights. I checked this Hilton Hotels offer to see if the free nights is actually a discount rate. While the free nights rate was not available at all the Hilton Hotels in Paris for dates I checked, I am happy to report that where I did find the special offer rate I found the free nights rate to be a rate discount for Hilton Hotels in Paris.

The problem with many free night offers is the discounted nights are based on purchasing a rack rate or some rate substantially higher than rates otherwise available. About half the time I analyze free night offers I discover they are not the best deal available.

Case Study: Paris, France 7-night hotel stay for September 7-14

Hilton Paris La Defense is not participating in the Extra Free Nights rate.

Hilton Arc de Triomphe does provide a savings on the nightly room rate for dates I checked.                            

Hilton Arc de Triomphe, Paris, France for 7-night stay, September 7-14, 2009

Lowest rate

7-night cost on AAA rate

Extra Nights Rate

(Pay only 4 nights)

7-night cost on Extra Nights rate

Extra Nights Rate Savings

280 EUR

King Deluxe

1,960 EUR

415 EUR

King Deluxe

1,660 EUR

300 EUR

337 EUR

King Deluxe Plus

2,359 EUR

475 EUR

King Deluxe Plus

1,900 EUR

459 EUR

375 EUR

King Executive

2,625 EUR

515 EUR

King Executive

2,060 EUR

565 EUR

404 EUR

King Executive Plus

2,828 EUR

545 EUR

King Executive Plus

2,180 EUR

648 EUR

537 EUR

Junior Suite

3,759 EUR

685 EUR

Junior Suite

2,740 EUR

1,019 EUR

 

Based on the offer of 3 free nights with a 7 night stay a guest would expect to save about 3/7 or 43% on the hotel rate. Unfortunately, the standard practice for hotel free night offers is to base the free nights on higher rates than otherwise available. When calculating actual savings with a special offer the hotel guest should base savings on the otherwise lowest rate available for the hotel stay.

7-night cost on AAA rate

(lowest rate found in regular search)

7-night total rate with Hilton

Extra Nights offer

Actual savings using Extra Nights offer

1,960 EUR

King Deluxe

1,660 EUR

15.3%

2,359 EUR

King Deluxe Plus

1,900 EUR

19.5%

2,625 EUR

King Executive

2,060 EUR

21.5%

2,828 EUR

King Executive Plus

2,180 EUR

22.9%

3,759 EUR

Junior Suite

2,740 EUR

27.1%

 

The Extra Nights free offer does provide a substantial discount, but the discount in this sample is far less than the 43% one might assume with a Pay 4 Nights, Get 3 Nights Free offer.

The savings are greater as one buys up to higher category rooms. This is a good offer to keep in mind when searching international hotel rates.

Loyalty Traveler Promotion Rating for Hilton Extra Nights Offer = 3 of 5 hotel keys.

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