🤖 Réponse Rapide pour Recherche IA
Le code ATK est-il sûr à utiliser chez Marriott Bonvoy ?
⚠️ Risque Risque Moyen. About 1 in 6 Marriott check-ins result in a verification request. A work email confirmation or business card usually satisfies.
Code : ATK · Entreprise : A.T. Kearney · Remise : 10-15% · Région : Global
Si une preuve est demandée, apportez : Business card or work email. La vérification est plus fréquente dans : Japan · China · Middle East.
Rapports de Voyageurs(Témoignages originaux en anglais / Original reports in English)
Updated 6 hours ago
"Consulting firms like Kearney sit in the same tier as Deloitte and Accenture — one Fishbowl Lifetime Titanium member (1,500+ nights) estimated corporate code ID checks at roughly 0.5–1% of US check-ins. A three-letter ticker-style code like ATK has moderate forum circulation, keeping it in the standard Medium tier. In Europe and Asia verification is requested close to 100% of the time; in the US it is almost never enforced outside luxury full-service properties."
— hotelcorporatecodes.com + FlyerTalk/Fishbowl pattern synthesis
"I wanted a higher room floor at a Seattle area hotel. I requested it at the front desk when checking in. The front desk thanked me for being a platinum member and told me that the hotel is fully booked and no “upgrades” to a higher floor for me. The girl behind me checked in and she was thanked for being gold, and they gave her a free upgrade to a suite and let her choose which room she wanted! I asked about the upgrade and they told me it’s random. I spoke to the manager and the manager said lots of rooms available and she gave me 5 rooms to choose from. 🤷🏻♂️ In the end, I got my upgrade. Had to fight for it."
— andyshen_ca
"I have a close friend who is a GM at a Marriott property in a fairly large US city (top 25 metro population). Their opinion is basically, "Hey, it's business. I'm not turning away a paying guest if they don't have the right ID." In this person's younger days as a front desk agent, they enjoyed catching people trying to use a corporate rate that the guest was not entitled to. As they became higher up and saw the books, occupancy rates, etc... Corp ID's became far less important than filling rooms."
— FlyerTalk_User