🤖 Resposta Rápida de Pesquisa IA
O código N0794705 é seguro de usar na Hilton Honors?
⚠️ Risco Risco Médio. Enforcement is property-dependent. London, Japan, and premium Hilton properties check more often; US properties rarely do.
Código: N0794705 · Empresa: Home Depot · Desconto: 10-15% · Região: Global
Se for pedida prova, traga: Business card (usually enough). A verificação é mais comum em: Japan · London · Middle East.
Relatórios de Viajantes(Relatórios originais em inglês / Original reports in English)
Updated 6 hours ago
"hotelcorporatecodes.com lists Home Depot N0794705 as "Sometimes" for ID check frequency. The site states: "ID verification may occur occasionally — it's not a guaranteed requirement for every booking, but the inconsistent verification pattern appears across many other Hilton corporate codes." Home Depot is a very large employer whose code circulates widely online, increasing the chance that a hotel with higher-than-average fraud awareness will verify it."
— hotelcorporatecodes.com editorial assessment
"I know that previously the Hertz IBM rate was always fixed in the mid $30s for a full size vehicle with last car availability. A minivan was $175/week in Orlando even during President's week when the going rate was about $1,200. This is probably why Hertz and at least Avis has been more strict. I have found Marriott to be very strict, especially at key locations, when it comes to the government rate. Marriott wants travel orders, a government ID, and/or a government credit card. I found Hilton to be less strict for those government rates."
— FlyerTalk_User
"One thing I am curious about is whether the hotel CRM shows the booking channel. Most true corporate travel is booked through something like Concur, AMEX GBT, CWT, etc. If the agent sees the booking come through one of those channels with a person's name on it and then gets a card or photo ID (not corporate ID) from said person, it's a pretty low fraud risk. But if it is a reservation through the hotel's channels using just a typed-in code, then I'd think they would have reason to be more strict in seeking proof of affiliation."
— FlyerTalk_User