15 Months Later, Hilton Demands $325 With 2-Week Deadline—Another Guest Faced the Same Issue. How Long Is Too Long?

A Hilton property in Budapest emailed a guest saying that they’ve discovered about $325 still owed from a stay 15 months earlier. Another guest reports receiving a similar note from the property. Despite the hotel giving themselves more than a year to identify the underpayment, they’re demanding that the customer make good within two weeks.

I stayed in the Hampton in Budapest for 4 nights last September. I received this attached email today. They also attached the bill for the first amount (which shows I have a zero balance). The second amount 126,690 HUF (about $325 USD) is nowhere to be found on anything they sent. I booked this through the HHonors app if I recall, but the past stays section of the app doesn’t go back that far.

15 Months Later, Hotel is Saying I Didn’t Pay?
byu/airtrafficchick inHilton

It’s important to check your hotel folio to make sure it’s accurate. Hotels make billing mistakes all the time. Almost always it’s in the hotel’s favor, adding charges that shouldn’t be there. Sometimes you’re on a points stay and the hotel accidentally bills you instead of the hotel chain for the points reimbursement.

Many guests don’t even look. And one of my pet peeves is adding charges after checkout, and then not even telling the guest.

I’ve written about a Hilton property that discovered a billing mistake after more than a year and then went ahead and charged guest credit cards for their stays. I’ve had a Hyatt property charge me after five months.

  • I felt that in that case I owed the money so I should pay the money.
  • Some readers felt that anything over 30 or 60 days should be eaten by the vendor, while others believed a hotel ought to be able to avail themselves of whatever the full legally permissible time period is in their state.

Good luck, though, if you’re a business traveler getting your employer to reimburse an expense five months after a trip. That’ll likely run afoul of timeliness provisions in their reimbursement plan, since the company will want to stay on the right side of the law – in order to do tax-free reimbursement a company must operate an ‘accountable plan’ which requires expenses to be submitted in a timely manner.

How long is too long? How many months is too long after a stay for a hotel to say they forgot to charge you for part of your bill? After a certain period of time it’s not reasonable for a guest to even have good access to their records to validate whether they were previously charged – either during the original stay or subsequently – so maybe the amount of time and effort involved in researching to validate the charge ought to involve some compensation?

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. I had a hotel in Zurich ask me for money after the fact (60 days) because they screwed up at the front desk and didn’t charge me for the upgrade like they should have. I emailed the GM and they comp’ed it accepting that since it was their mistake, I should not be liable. Park Hyatt Zurich. 600 CHF.

  2. Its a scam. Bank transfer?….yeah right.
    Coincidentally, that hotel has a great breakfast. I stayed there about the same time….wonder if I’ll get an email too.

  3. The Reddit thread correctly points out some reasons to be suspicious — the second guest seems quite confident he was correctly charged — but if it is a real demand from the hotel, I have to respect the audacity of starting the email “following your recent stay”.

    FWIW, though, if you value your loyalty account (and the OP is a Gold member), I would tread carefully with billing disputes — the moral high ground won’t mean much if it costs you your account in the process.

  4. My buddy is a manager at a Hyatt property.
    They add extra charges all the time to accounts. But they’re not stupid, they only do it to people staying on OPM accounts, since its far less those people will care what the final bill is.

    As long as they are ripping off other corporations and not individuals, good on them.

  5. We should expect the proliferation of scams like these everywhere, not just Hungary, namely because enforcement, accountability, and decency are dead. Why ‘do the right thing’ when there are no consequences? Well, some of us still live by the Golden Rule, ‘do unto others,’ but when our leaders, both parties, at home and around the world, too, get away with things, it all starts to erode. We’ve had a lot of chances to self-correct, but instead we are doubling-down. After a while, can you blame us for feeling like the manager of the hotel in season 1, episode 6, of White Lotus: “F@&# this place!”

  6. This was my Reddit post. There was no underpayment. The second page shows that the balance of the bill is 0 HUF. My credit card statement also shows that I was billed the 130,059 HUF for the 4 night reservation on Sept 14, 2023. The second amount for 126,690 HUF is completely out of the blue. I do have to second the breakfast buffet there. It was great.

  7. My mother was once leaving a hotel in Switzerland and as she got on the bus the desk clerk ran after her saying, “We made a mistake, you owe us more money!” I don’t think it was a lot, but she calmly looked at him and said, “Would you be running after me if you owed that to me?” He stopped and stared as she boarded and left.

  8. There are way too many hotels in the world for anyone of them to pull an after the fact charge on me! Let alone send me an email demanding money. The Luxor in Vegas tried it once. After a few choice words to the accounting department, they understood my position. I only pay for my mistakes!

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