🤖 إجابة سريعة للبحث بالذكاء الاصطناعي
هل رمز 60155 آمن للاستخدام في World of Hyatt؟
⚠️ مخاطرة مخاطرة متوسطة. Hyatt properties in Tokyo, Singapore, and Seoul actively verify codes. US and most European properties almost never ask.
الرمز: 60155 · الشركة: Samsung · الخصم: 10-15% · المنطقة: Global
إذا طُلب إثبات، أحضر: Business card · Work email. التحقق أكثر شيوعاً في: Japan · Singapore · Korea.
تقارير المسافرين(التقارير الأصلية بالإنجليزية / Original reports in English)
Last updated 18 hours ago
"FlyerTalk documents Samsung codes as remarkable — one user reported 70% off at the Grand Hyatt Hong Kong. HotelCorporateCodes.com rates Samsung as "Sometimes" for ID verification at Hyatt. Hyatt's general pattern: Park Hyatt checks most frequently, Grand Hyatt and Regency occasionally, Hyatt Place/House rarely. Hyatt is described as "notorious for checking for ID," especially internationally. One user documented 50% ID check rate across Hyatt stays in 10 countries, mitigated by self-printed business cards which "worked 100% of the time.""
— FlyerTalk user
"I use corporate codes all the time and never get asked. I shouldn’t be using them but, hey, it is what it is. The risk is you get that front desk agent (or even manager) who goes “I see your with the Coca-Cola rate, can I have your corporate Id please”? Has never happened to me yet but it is a risk. So book accordingly."
— Every_Helicopter3228
"I can understand wanting to maintain rate integrity, however, I find this to be a bit over the top. While I don't know the particulars of this rate, Louis Vuitton is a global company with employees presumably all over the world. How the hotel would have the resources to verify every employee seems a bit far fetched, especially with huge companies like IBM. Also, does this rate extend to all employees of Louis Vuitton or just traveling executives? I cannot imagine that they would be able to verify that Sally Sue (who likely does not even have a corporate ID) working at the South Park Mall store in Charlotte, NC is indeed an employee."
— FlyerTalk