How to get an upgrade or six

J

judy foreman

Guest
This was posted under a totally different topic, but may be a fun discussion by itself.
The question: how do people get upgraded anyway?
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Original Post:

Not totally sure how the Upgrade Fairies work their magic. From heated discussions on this and other boards, personal experience and comments from our travel agent, I've gathered the following, and I could still be wrong:

1) Much depends on when you book, and how well the ship is filling up at the time.
A way to assess this is to monitor fares via Yahoo, Orbitz, Vacations-to-go, and the ships' own websites. If prices are dropping, you have to assume they need to drum up sales, and an emptier ship means more cabins to upgrade to. If prices are rising, then demand must be strong and you may not get anything more than what you booked.

2) We had never booked "guarantee" before, figuring they'd just stick you in the worst cabin next to the boiler room. But it was explained to us that this just means you'll get that category, or better. So the strategy would be to book a guarantee in the lowest cabin category you can live with. So that if you get an upgrade, great, if not, it's still just fine.

3) As the sailing date nears, the cruiselines have to fill up the ship. That's when they start to lower prices, so they can advertise these deals and get new bookings. But they can't afford to turn off the customers who've already booked. So they might stick new customers in lesser cabins, based on the fact that they're paying lower prices. That's when those who booked earlier and paid more, get bumped up. This may be happening more because people are getting so used to booking last minute for the best deals, the cruiselines now have to encourage people to book earlier, and upgrading early bookers is one way to reinforce this desired behaviour.

4) People who've sailed with the line before, tend to get upgraded first and more often. We noticed this on our March sailing on the Spirit. Not only did we get a price break, but got bumped up 5 decks. So what if it was Carnival...8 days cost us $385 US each.
We're told Princess treats past passengers very well. We'll find out once we get this one out of the way, and book our next!

5) A lot can happen around 70 days prior to sailing. Something about groups who've prebooked a bunch of space, having to let unsold cabins back on the market. Or else it's that around then, people have to pay in full. Not sure. But the cruiselines get a clearer picture of how the ship is filling up. I noticed, for example, our sailing has come down in price a bit in the month since we've booked. And our agent has said we may be upgraded again. She's seen people get bumped up 4 times in the months leading up to the cruise.

6) I do think this upgrading stuff happens more rarely than we'd think. And I'm sure people never get bumped up from say, an inside cabin to the Royal Suite.

7) Our upgrade could also be because we are first timers at Princess, and getting into to that demographic of frequent cruisers, and maybe they wanted to "wow" us from the start. Who knows. This is also the first time we're with this particular travel agent, and she knows we've been on three vacations in 8 months, so maybe she did something that's within agents' power parameters, and called it an upgrade.

8) So maybe bug your agent more. Check out current prices of the category you booked - if there's a huge difference, ask about it. At the very least, you'd be getting some information for the next time.

Again, I could be totally wrong about these observations. There could be, in fact, absolutely no science to this, just pure dumb luck!
Insight from others most welcome.
 
P

p.g.

Guest
Hi The first time we cruised with Princess was in 1998. We booked an inside guarantee an d 10 days before sailing our agent informed us that we had been upgraded to an outside balcony suite. We were shocked. and fully expected to be told on arrival at the ship that it was a mistake. It wasn't , we had a lovely room (and balcony)At dinner that night we sat at a table of 8 and discovered every one had been upgraded ! Only one couple had ever sailed on Princess, the others like us had booked far in advance ( in our case we had booked a year in advance!)So other then booking in advance it must involve how the ship is filling up ( ours did not seem full)I wish I knew the for sure way to get an upgrade( don't we all) but the one thing is we all ended upwith great cabins but we all paid different prices!!??!!
 
L

Lady Jag

Guest
I don't think #8 (the first part) had anything to do with it. Princess doesn't hope to "wow" their first time passengers. Most likely, they needed that cabin you were in because it was a good price to advertise. (Everything's about the bottom dollar - they ARE in this business to make money.)

I do think the agent has a lot to do with the upgrades. How well does he/she know their area rep.? Do they have a good rapport and have known each other for quite awhile?

Most of all, it's pure luck and past cruises with the company, IMO.
 
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