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Frequently Asked Questions

Corporate codes, verification risk, and how our ratings work.

Using Corporate Codes

What is a hotel corporate code?
A corporate code (also called a rate code or account code) is a short alphanumeric string that unlocks a pre-negotiated discount at a hotel chain. Examples: IBM at Marriott, Accenture at Hilton. These rates are typically 10–40% below published prices and are negotiated between large employers and hotel chains for their employees.
Do I need to be an employee to use one?
Yes. Corporate codes are negotiated for eligible employees — and sometimes their immediate families on leisure travel. Using a code you are not entitled to violates the rate terms. If the front desk asks for proof and you can't provide it, you will be rebooked at the full walk-up rate.
How do I enter the code when booking?
On the hotel chain's own booking page, look for a "Special Rates," "Corporate Account," or "Company Code" field — usually a dropdown or free-text input at the rate selection step. Enter the code exactly as shown (some systems are case-sensitive). Note: some codes only work via GDS (travel agent) booking, not directly on the hotel website.
Why does the code sometimes show "not available"?
Not every property participates in every corporate agreement. Franchise-owned hotels, luxury tiers, and resort-category properties may opt out. Some codes also have property-tier restrictions — a code for full-service InterContinental properties won't work at Holiday Inn Express.

Understanding Risk Levels

How are Low / Medium / High risk levels calculated?
Risk levels are based on aggregated check-in reports from FlyerTalk forums, Reddit (r/churning, r/awardtravel), Fishbowl, and travel communities. Low = under 10% of reported check-ins resulted in an ID request. Medium = 10–40%, inconsistent enforcement, usually at full-service urban properties. High = 50%+ rate, or documented systematic enforcement at specific properties.
Why does the same company show different risks across brands?
Each hotel chain enforces rates independently. A code rated Low at Radisson (franchise network, minimal enforcement) may be Medium at Marriott (widespread community visibility, centralized systems) or High at Hyatt in Asia (documented systematic checks). Our per-brand ratings reflect each chain's actual, observed enforcement pattern.
Are Asian hotels significantly stricter?
Yes — Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, and Singapore properties verify credentials in approximately 75–80% of check-ins, versus 10–25% in North America. Grand Hyatt Tokyo, Park Hyatt properties across Asia, and InterContinental hotels in major Asian cities are among the most enforcement-active. FlyerTalk users consistently report being asked for business cards, badges, or even corporate email confirmation in Asia.
What makes a code High risk specifically?
Three factors drive High ratings: (1) Documented systematic enforcement — a specific property policy targeting that code; (2) Named in community lore as consistently checked (e.g., Marriott Friends & Family, General Dynamics at Marriott); (3) Automated system flags — Marriott's system has been documented to disable Mobile Key for certain codes, forcing a front-desk interaction regardless of individual staff policy.

Getting Asked for ID

What happens if the front desk asks for ID and I can't show it?
The hotel will typically offer to: (1) Honor the rate if you have any plausible evidence — business card, company email, badge — even imperfect; (2) Rebook you at the best available public rate for that night, which can be significantly higher; or (3) In rare cases, cancel the reservation. Most properties prefer to rebook rather than cancel, especially if you can pay the difference.
Will a business card always work?
A business card is widely reported as sufficient for Medium-risk codes at Marriott and Hilton. However, for High-risk codes — particularly at Hyatt in Asia — some properties specifically request a company-issued photo ID badge. At certain Grand Hyatt properties, FlyerTalk documents cases where email confirmation from a corporate address was requested.
Can the hotel report me to my employer?
Rare, but possible in specific situations. Some major corporate clients (GE, IBM) have been documented to audit hotel usage volume. If anomalous personal usage is detected, the employer — not the hotel — may initiate a review. The hotel itself typically just charges the higher rate and moves on. This is a much greater concern at companies known for strict travel policy enforcement.

About Our Data

Where does the data come from?
Primary sources: FlyerTalk's long-running megathreads for each chain (Marriott Rate Codes, Hilton Corporate Codes, IHG Rate Codes, Hyatt Discount Codes) — collectively containing tens of thousands of check-in reports. Secondary sources: Reddit (r/churning, r/awardtravel, r/Hyatt, r/marriott), Fishbowl app, hotelcorporatecodes.com, milepro.com, and travel blogs.
How current is the data?
The database was compiled in early 2026 from reports spanning 2018–2026, weighted toward recent (2022–2026) experiences. Enforcement policies change — for example, UK Hilton properties significantly increased enforcement in 2022. If you see a rating that seems outdated, please contact us with the source.
Can I submit a missing code or correct a rating?
Yes — email hello@corporatecodecheck.com with the code, hotel brand, company name, and any source link (FlyerTalk post, Reddit thread, etc.). We review all submissions and update ratings when sufficient evidence exists.
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