Fratthouse
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2012
- Messages
- 596
Back in January of 2020, I rented points to someone in Canada for a trip in September of 2020. The trip obviously had to be cancelled because the border to Canada was closed. The contract clearly stated no refunds or changes to the reservation, but because of the unique nature of the situation, I offered to reschedule the trip for them. We rescheduled a second trip for the spring of 2021, which also had to be cancelled because the borders were still closed. At that point, I offered to bank my points into the 2022 UY and to book a trip for them anytime in 2022, which they agreed to. Now I just received an email saying they want to cancel due to new restrictions related to the Omicron variant and are expecting a refund.
I'm not sure the best course of action. I want to be fair, but have also spent a pretty extensive amount of time on this renter's contract (researching availability, writing multiple contracts, ongoing communication regarding booking, and now potentially re-listing and having to re-rent the points). I'm thinking of offering a refund once I'm able to rent the points out, but charging a 20% cancellation fee to offset my time invested in this reservation (would be around $350). I realize this cancellation isn't the renter's fault, but they also were the ones who assumed the risk by signing a non-cancellable / changeable contract and chose not to get trip insurance. Does 20% seem like too much for a cancellation fee? Is there something else I should be thinking about?
**I researched current Canada border restrictions. Non-essential travel is not recommended, but doesn't appear to be "banned." They could potentially require a quarantine period upon return, however. The wording of this was vague - referenced it be up to the border agent upon your return. So travel is possible, but could be highly disruptive for the renter at this time.
I'm not sure the best course of action. I want to be fair, but have also spent a pretty extensive amount of time on this renter's contract (researching availability, writing multiple contracts, ongoing communication regarding booking, and now potentially re-listing and having to re-rent the points). I'm thinking of offering a refund once I'm able to rent the points out, but charging a 20% cancellation fee to offset my time invested in this reservation (would be around $350). I realize this cancellation isn't the renter's fault, but they also were the ones who assumed the risk by signing a non-cancellable / changeable contract and chose not to get trip insurance. Does 20% seem like too much for a cancellation fee? Is there something else I should be thinking about?
**I researched current Canada border restrictions. Non-essential travel is not recommended, but doesn't appear to be "banned." They could potentially require a quarantine period upon return, however. The wording of this was vague - referenced it be up to the border agent upon your return. So travel is possible, but could be highly disruptive for the renter at this time.