Priceline bidding: how does it work?

6/1/2016 10:33:09 AM

I found a a link with useful experiences of doing this:
http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/online-travel-booking-bidding-agencies/1170662-bidding-air-tickets-priceline.html
I won’t summarise since the links is 5 years old. However, it did encourage me to try a few experiments myself.

I have a US gift card with a few dollars on it so could use that to make some bids:

Bid 1: July 2 – July 9 JFK-SFO. I Bid $100
I was offered $444 for LGA-SFO
I was offered $467 for JFK-SFO

On skyscanner I could find $455 for JFK-SFO which beats the second offer and the first offer has no timings. I’d prefer the transparent $455 personally.

Bid 2: June 4 – June 5 SFO-SAN. I Bid $100
I was Offered $188 for SFO-SAN but for June 4 – 6
Best price on skyscanner I could find was $380
Best price on Spirit was $333
I was also Offered $270 for the original bid dates of June 4-5
Best I could find on skyscanner was $380
Spirit had no return flight on the 5th

Bid 3: London – Rome 4-5 June Bid $40
Told I would receive an email. Email said bid unsuccessful

Bid 4: SFO-CLT one way June 4 Bid $120
Told I would receive an email. Email said bid unsuccessful

Bid 5: BOS-ORD June 11 one/way Bid $145
Told I would receive an email. Email said bid unsuccessful

After several bids it seems likely that any new unaccepted bids will not receive a counter offer. I checked the flights for LON-BDA on skyscanner and got a cheapest price of $1250. I put a bid in (bid 6) for $850 and received the rejection email without a counter offer.

Summary: I suspect priceline wants to discourage many low bids as a way of gaming the system. I did get one good offer that was $200 lower than any other price I could find, so I don’t think priceline NYOB is a con. That result aligns with the experiences in my first link.

Note that you won’t get any of the frequent flier benefits such as miles or potential upgrades if you would otherwise have been eligible.

I imagine that if you are flexible priceline NYOB is well worth a go. My strategy would be to research the best available prices and then put in an offer somewhat lower than the best offer found to see if a counter offer is supplied. I believe that the odds of being given a counter offer will diminish rapidly with multiple attempts.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

About me

Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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