Originally Posted by
sherpa
I had a similar experience when I booked a hotel in Russellville, Arkansas to view next April’s solar eclipse. The hour rooms became available for the desired night at the Econo Lodge in Russellville, I booked at $65/night - compared with $800 per night at other hotels. A couple days later, I receive a notice acknowledging “my” cancellation (as if I had canceled, which I had note) followed by an email from the hotel GM stating “I am writing to reiterate our regret that your reservation for a room which was scheduled for April 2024 was cancelled. Unfortunately, due to unforeseen circumstances, we are unable to accommodate.” In the meantime, rooms were available online for date I had previously reserved at $1,000/night.
Of course, there was nothing to reiterate as there was no prior “apology” for THEIR cancelling my reservation. Given the language of these emails, I had to conclude that the hotel realized “too late” that it missed an opportunity to jack up its rates so simply canceled early-made reservations at the rack rate in order to engage in extreme price gouging. Ultimately, I decided not to make an issue of this as we decided to skip seeing the eclipse. But I have sworn off Choice hotels.
Before the last eclipse, a lot of hotels in Oregon apparently canceled bookings when they realized they could have sold the rooms for more money. That got the attention of the Oregon AG.
https://www.statesmanjournal.com/sto...pse/479913001/
I don’t know how consumer friendly AR is but I would certainly have filed a complaint and left the hotel a bunch of 1* reviews.