Good advice from bidding sites?~Priceline and Hotwire

angiepangie8

DIS Veteran
Joined
Aug 3, 2007
Messages
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I went to biddingfortravel.com to get advice on priceline, however it looks like they won't help you unless you are ready to immediately bid. Geese! Doesn't look as easy going and carefree as DIS however, I am sure they will be helpful if I decide to use Priceline for sure. I started a word doc. with all the 13 or so items on their checklist.
Will you be bidding immediately (bid strategies are based on current info.)? If you are not immediately ready to bid, please do not say that you are as it is a waste of everyone's time and it is disrespectful of the free service offered. This means that if you have already bid and you have to wait 24 hours to bid again, do not post your request until the lockout period has passed. Please do not post your request until you are immediately ready to bid.

Anyone else get good advice for priceline from biddingfortravel.com?

I also made a bunch of posts on betterbidding.com, however I am used to the DIS so I believe that I may not have followed their rules when posting as I guess all of your posts need to be on the same thread. I'm waiting to see if they are able to help me with my Hotwire questions.

I would love to hear if any DISers experiences using betterbidding
 
At biddingfortravel: I usually look at the bids at different hotels that others have posted. I most often bid 2 1/2* or 3* for one night at the airport (MCO zone) or Resort in the Walt Disney World Vicinity zone. Some people don't like the
Worldgate hotel that shows up at the 3* level in WDW, but just a few days ago someone posted about their positive experience there. I think most of the 3* and 2 1/2* in the WDW zone are fine.

If you do decide to go ahead and bid, be sure you understand about free rebids. If you are bidding on a 3* hotel, you can add zones without any 3* hotels and stay only in the area you picked.

There is a sticky at the top of the page with reviews -- you'll see several of my posts.

HTH
 
At biddingfortravel: I usually look at the bids at different hotels that others have posted. I most often bid 2 1/2* or 3* for one night at the airport (MCO zone) or Resort in the Walt Disney World Vicinity zone. Some people don't like the
Worldgate hotel that shows up at the 3* level in WDW, but just a few days ago someone posted about their positive experience there. I think most of the 3* and 2 1/2* in the WDW zone are fine.

If you do decide to go ahead and bid, be sure you understand about free rebids. If you are bidding on a 3* hotel, you can add zones without any 3* hotels and stay only in the area you picked.

There is a sticky at the top of the page with reviews -- you'll see several of my posts.

HTH

I still don't get why do the free rebid thing unless you are in a hurry
If I really want say a 3* in the Disney Vicinity and don't want to expand my zones then isn't just better to wait 24 hours and put in a whole new bid but maybe offer a couple bucks more? :confused: I don't know if I am understandign that correctly. I tried to ask a the bidding sites but haven't received an answer yet.
thanks dgaston!
 
From bidding for travel:

A free re-bid is adding a zone that has only up to a lower quality level than you are bidding, to a rejected bid. It is not adding a zone that just doesn't have the quality level you are bidding. It must be a zone that has only up to a lower quality level.

For re-bidding purposes (when your bid has been rejected), add a zone that has only up to a lower quality level than what you are bidding, because that just gives you a free re-bid for your original zone. In other words, if Zone B has only 1*, 2* and 3* hotels (or 1* and 2*), and your original bid for a 4* hotel in Zone A has been rejected, you can add Zone B as a free rebid to your Zone A offer. You will not get a hotel in Zone B because it does not offer 4* hotels. Of course when you add the zone, you'll need to increase your bid amount and not lower your original quality level. To determine which zones offer which star levels, see #10 below. The Hotel Lists should never be used to determine your free re-bid zones for the reasons stated in the introductory comments on the Hotel Lists which you should read to learn how the Hotel Lists are compiled.

For purposes of free re-bidding, a zone with the highest level as Resort is only a free re-bid when bidding for a 5*. Bidding any lower than 5* and adding a zone that has Resort can result in what Priceline refers to as an upgrade to a Resort in the added zone.

In order to re-bid, you have to change at least one parameter of your bid. That could be adding a zone (as shown above), or changing the quality level, or changing the checkin or checkout date. Once you have exhausted all of those, you must wait 24 hours before bidding again.
 

From bidding for travel:

OK I did read that on bidding for travel but, I'm still confused even after reading that :lmao: ~i feel like such a dunce


I found this and a light bulb started to come on:

Free Rebid Zones.
If Priceline does not accept your bid, It will come back with a screen saying that your price was not accepted and allow you to rebid if you change either the dates of your stay, the quality of hotel you’re willing to accept or the zones you are willing to accept.
Your free rebid zones are zones whose maximum star listing is lower than your desired star level.
So if you can choose another zone which only has LOWER star ratings than you want then this is a free rebid as PL will not give you a lower star than you asked.
:idea:
hurray wording i can understand!
 
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Here is another great explanation
YEEES the light is on!!!!!
lighten.gif

I think I understand
I just needed it in layman's terms. :banana: :banana: :banana:

Learn a few tricks to make your bid on hotel rooms work for you.
Getting the best deal when you bid on hotel rooms on Priceline can be tricky. Once you've done your homework, decided how much to bid on the hotel rooms, and placed your bid, your offer may still be rejected. When that happens, you must wait three days (72 full hours) for another chance to place a free bid again for the same trip.

Or do you?

Many Priceline customers are taking advantage of a loophole in the system, casually known as "using non 4 star zones," to turn in a free re-bid immediately. It sounds complicated, but it's fairly simple -- and effective -- to re-bid on hotel rooms once you get the hang of it.

To understand free re-bidding, you have to first know a little about how bidding on Priceline works. After a bid you've placed has been rejected, Priceline allows you to bid on hotel rooms again, but only if you significantly change your bid.
To qualify, you would have to add another zone (area of town), lower your quality requirements, or change the dates of your stay. Simply raising the amount of your bid doesn't qualify you for a free re-bid.

Hotels on Priceline are rated by quality using a star system. Lowest quality hotels are 1 star, and highest quality (resorts) are 5 stars. Herein lies the key to free re-bidding: not all zones have hotels in every quality category.

What does that mean? Simple. Imagine you are looking for a 4-star hotel in the zone closest to the airport. Your bid on hotel rooms is rejected. You'd like to bid again with a slightly higher price for the same hotels, but Priceline won't allow that. So you locate a zone in the same city (perhaps across town) that does not have any 4-star hotels in it, raise your bid price, and try again.

Adding a new zone to your bid qualifies you for the free re-bid Priceline offers. And, since the new zone you've chosen doesn't contain any 4-star hotels, you will not be stuck with a hotel in that zone. It's important to remember when using this system to raise your bid price with the free re-bid. Otherwise, adding the new zone will do you no good; your new offer will be an exact duplicate of your previous offer, and will be rejected again.

So, how do you find out which zones have which star quality levels? It's easy -- in fact, Priceline will tell you. Start over as if you were creating a new bid. Once you get to the screen which lists all the zones in a particular city, choose one and select "Next." On the next page, you will be allowed to choose a star level from the levels listed. If the zone you've selected has 4- or 3-star hotels listed as a choice, use your browser's "Back" button to try again and select another zone. (For this trick to work, make sure you only select one zone at a time.) Once you find a zone that has no 3- or 4-star hotels listed, you've found the "dummy" zone you can use. Start your re-bid and add this dummy zone to your offer.

When using the free re-bid system, always double-check to make sure the dummy zone you're using does not contain any hotels in your star quality range -- even if you've bid in this city before. Zones -- and the hotels included in them -- are subject to change daily, so you will want to confirm that your dummy zone is still empty of the star quality hotels you are requesting.
 
make sure the dummy zone you're using does not contain any hotels in your star quality range


The dummy zone!

That's the zone I felt like I was just in!!!:lmao: :lmao: :rotfl2:
 











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