“Tips to ensure vacation rentals don't disappoint (AP via Yahoo! News)” plus 3 more |
- Tips to ensure vacation rentals don't disappoint (AP via Yahoo! News)
- Tips To Ensure Vacation Rentals Don't Disappoint (CBS News)
- When renting vacation homes, ask lots of questions (AP via Yahoo! News)
- When Renting Vacation Homes, Ask Lots Of Questions (CBS News)
| Tips to ensure vacation rentals don't disappoint (AP via Yahoo! News) Posted: 22 Mar 2010 11:15 AM PDT Here are a few tips from the Better Business Bureau, travel experts and seasoned renters to make sure you don't get burned when you rent a home for your vacation. _Get a written agreement spelling out terms and conditions. Never wire money or write a personal check. Plastic is the way to go because your credit card company may offer some protection. If you can show that promised goods and services were not provided, you may be able to get a refund. _Don't trust an owner who will only communicate via e-mail, and don't hesitate to pick up the phone to ask the owner/property manager detailed questions or even request more photos than those displayed in the online ad. _Find out how you'll get back your security deposit, if there is one, and what it covers. _Ask friends for recommendations. If you decide on a house or condo belonging to a stranger, ask for references from others who have stayed there. • If a deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is. In most cases, you get what you pay for. _Plug the property owner and address into a Web browser and see what comes up. You may discover complaints from previous renters. Make sure you're dealing with the real property owner. Scammers can steal information to create phony listings. _Seasoned renters suggest negotiating with owners/managers on price if vacancy rates in the area are high. You can also inquire about perks to sweeten the deal, like free tickets or discounts to local activities. _Be skeptical of glowing online reviews, especially if the reviewers are anonymous. _Ask the owner/property manager to define nebulous terms like "oceanfront property" and "5-minute walk to the beach." Make sure you're clear on such things as how far the house is from the center of town. _If the owner doesn't live in the area, find out if there's a local caretaker who can deal with problems like blown fuses or an overflowing toilet. Find out whom to contact in case of an emergency. _If you have physical limitations, ask about handicap accommodations including elevator service. Everyone, with or without disabilities, is likely to want to know about noise levels, air conditioning and heating, and mattresses. _If your group plans big communal meals, make sure there are enough pots, pans, utensils and table service. Inquire about essentials like coffee makers, cutting boards and good knives. _Ask what the cleaning fees will be, and try to determine whether any fees have gone unmentioned. Pauline Frommer of Pauline Frommer travel guides notes that in some European countries you may have to pay extra for electricity or other utilities. Ask about phone service, Internet and Wi-Fi. _If possible, visit the property before renting it. _If a property doesn't live up to its billing, document problems with pictures or videos. Complain immediately to the owner or property manager. Keep receipts. Compile a meticulous record of all transactions and what went wrong. If you believe you've been a victim of fraud, you may be able to seek recourse in court. Check your state's consumer protection laws to see what you may be entitled to and whether there are deadlines for filing. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Tips To Ensure Vacation Rentals Don't Disappoint (CBS News) Posted: 22 Mar 2010 10:10 AM PDT (AP) Here are a few tips from the Better Business Bureau, travel experts and seasoned renters to make sure you don't get burned when you rent a home for your vacation. -Get a written agreement spelling out terms and conditions. Never wire money or write a personal check. Plastic is the way to go because your credit card company may offer some protection. If you can show that promised goods and services were not provided, you may be able to get a refund. -Don't trust an owner who will only communicate via e-mail, and don't hesitate to pick up the phone to ask the owner/property manager detailed questions or even request more photos than those displayed in the online ad. -Find out how you'll get back your security deposit, if there is one, and what it covers. -Ask friends for recommendations. If you decide on a house or condo belonging to a stranger, ask for references from others who have stayed there. - If a deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is. In most cases, you get what you pay for. -Plug the property owner and address into a Web browser and see what comes up. You may discover complaints from previous renters. Make sure you're dealing with the real property owner. Scammers can steal information to create phony listings. -Seasoned renters suggest negotiating with owners/managers on price if vacancy rates in the area are high. You can also inquire about perks to sweeten the deal, like free tickets or discounts to local activities. -Be skeptical of glowing online reviews, especially if the reviewers are anonymous. -Ask the owner/property manager to define nebulous terms like "oceanfront property" and "5-minute walk to the beach." Make sure you're clear on such things as how far the house is from the center of town. -If the owner doesn't live in the area, find out if there's a local caretaker who can deal with problems like blown fuses or an overflowing toilet. Find out whom to contact in case of an emergency. -If you have physical limitations, ask about handicap accommodations including elevator service. Everyone, with or without disabilities, is likely to want to know about noise levels, air conditioning and heating, and mattresses. -If your group plans big communal meals, make sure there are enough pots, pans, utensils and table service. Inquire about essentials like coffee makers, cutting boards and good knives. -Ask what the cleaning fees will be, and try to determine whether any fees have gone unmentioned. Pauline Frommer of Pauline Frommer travel guides notes that in some European countries you may have to pay extra for electricity or other utilities. Ask about phone service, Internet and Wi-Fi. -If possible, visit the property before renting it. -If a property doesn't live up to its billing, document problems with pictures or videos. Complain immediately to the owner or property manager. Keep receipts. Compile a meticulous record of all transactions and what went wrong. If you believe you've been a victim of fraud, you may be able to seek recourse in court. Check your state's consumer protection laws to see what you may be entitled to and whether there are deadlines for filing. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| When renting vacation homes, ask lots of questions (AP via Yahoo! News) Posted: 22 Mar 2010 11:12 AM PDT NEW YORK – With three adult children, Teri Hurley made sure to book a house with three bedrooms for her family's Thanksgiving vacation in New York's Catskill Mountains. She was stunned — and angry — when she discovered that the third bedroom of the rental property was down a narrow, steep set of stairs under a kitchen trapdoor, half hidden by a scatter rug. "My son volunteered to play dungeon boy and took the basement accommodation," Hurley said. "When he wanted to enter the living area, he had to pound on his ceiling - our floor - so we could open the trap door to let him up!" When Hurley got home, she complained to VRBO.com, where she booked the rental online, but ultimately decided not to go through with a formal complaint. The disappointing experience in 2008 hasn't stopped her from renting on VRBO.com, which stands for vacation rentals by owner. For 10 years her family has stayed at the same Florida villa she found on VRBO. And last Christmas, she rented a "stunning" log house on 10 acres outside Woodstock, N.Y., also from VRBO. The vacation rental market — booking a vacation property directly from the owner or from a property management company — is booming. A study released in 2009 by the travel industry research firm PhoCusWright Inc. estimated the market to be $24.3 billion or more than a fifth of the U.S. lodging industry (based on room revenue) of $107 billion in 2007. Alexis de Belloy, vice president of U.S. business at HomeAway, Inc., the world's largest vacation rental marketplace and owner of sites including HomeAway.com, VRBO.com and VacationRentals.com, says HomeAway facilitates more than 300,000 bookings a month with only a "handful of instances" of unsatisfactory rentals. While he wasn't familiar with the particulars of Hurley's complaint, he says HomeAway has a staff of 100 who do customer support including investigate complaints. Documentation of a problem can lead to a listing being taken down. He also notes that the company offers rental insurance up to $10,000 that protects against Internet fraud and foreclosure, with the average cost for insurance about $44. The demand for vacation rentals is being driven by a number of factors: a large supply of second homes, some purchased as investments; more travel by large, multi-generational groups including for family reunions; and economies of scale which can make a vacation rental a better value than hotels, especially for longer stays. Another driver is the Internet, which lets both rental companies and individual homeowners go online to market their homes. But the industry is relatively new, fragmented and unregulated. Consider that Conrad Hilton purchased his first hotel in 1919 and that HomeAway was launched in 2006. When HomeAway ran a Super Bowl ad this year featuring Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo in a reprise of their roles as the Griswolds from the 1983 hit comedy "National Lampoon Vacation," it marked a sort of coming-of-age for the industry. As with any new thing, consumers need to be cautious. Web photos can be deceiving. Online reviews can be planted by people with an agenda, good or bad. Even if a glowing review were once true, properties deteriorate if they aren't maintained. What can a would-be renter do? Insist on a rental agreement. Pay with a credit card. Ask lots of questions, by phone as well as e-mail. Ask for references. Take out rental insurance. Inquire about extra fees. Find out how and when you'll get back your security deposit. Also this: Keep records. Make photos or videos of substandard conditions. Complain promptly if there's a problem. Seek out the Better Business Bureau if you feel you were victimized. Finally, know your needs. If you're traveling to a mountain hideaway in winter, who will plow the road to the main highway if there's a blizzard? Hurley's complaint about the "dungeon" third bedroom is mild compared to some of the horror stories online. John Romano, a vacation rental property owner who markets his properties on VRWD.com, which stands for Vacation Rentals Web Directory, started a companion site in 2006 called Vacation Rentals Watchdog — VRWD.org — where people can go to gripe. There you'll find scary stories about people who put down thousands of dollars in security deposits and travel hundreds or thousands of miles only to discover stained couches, cobweb-covered grills, dilapidated patio furniture, ant infestations — and worse. Some stick it out. Others take the loss, spending additional thousands of dollars for alternative lodging. Even rentals that don't turn out to be a disaster can still be inconvenient and provide a few heart-stopping moments. Alicia Cackley, an executive with the federal government, took her 79-year-old parents to Italy a few years ago, booking apartments online in Rome, Assisi and Lucca. All went well until they got to Lucca, where they planned to stay for a week and a half, taking day trips to Florence. The stone guest house on a larger estate was farther outside the city than she had expected and had very little heat — in October. "Heat is not an amenity," Cackley observed. "We sat around wrapped up in blankets." After three nights they moved out and she had to scramble to find new lodgings in town — without speaking Italian. Such cautionary tales resonate with me because of my own experience last December, when my husband and I rented a studio apartment in Paris for 11 days through VRBO. We arrived to discover no heat in the kitchen or bathroom, peeling wallpaper, rusty burners on the stovetop, broken light fixtures, and clumps of hair and dust on the floor. The worst moment, perhaps, was when the bed frame collapsed when we lay down to take a nap a few hours after arriving. After staying one night — the owner came that evening to repair the bed frame with packing tape — we moved into a hotel. Since we had paid the deposit by credit card, we disputed the charge and received a conditional credit. In addition, the owner refunded us three nights (minus a 50 euro fee) because he rented the place those nights. We complained to VRBO after returning to the U.S. and found their Trust & Security Team professional and responsive. Over the next few weeks, we discovered reams about the vacation rental industry — the hard way. One is that VRBO is "not a party to any rental transaction" and "the truth and accuracy of the listings are solely the responsibility of each user." That disclaimer can be found by clicking the Terms and Conditions link at the bottom of the home page. Yet despite my story and others like it, many people find great properties for good value. Douglas Quinby, senior director of research at PhoCusWright, found that 89 percent of people who booked vacation rentals say they'd do it again within three years. And the marketplace is growing. FlipKey.com was launched in 2008 to help vacation rental property managers and owners promote guest reviews. In contrast to sites that let anyone post, FlipKey collects reviews by sending e-mails to people who actually stayed at a property. Last fall saw the launch of another business model, SecondPorch.com, which lets people list and find vacation rentals through social networks like Facebook. Greg Gross, who blogs about travel at I'm Black & I Travel!, sings the praises of vacation rentals in a post about an apartment he rented in Paris last summer. "If you simply must have someone else making your bed and leaving a mint on your pillow every day, this may not be for you," he warns. Then he goes on to list the advantages: a real kitchen, which cuts down on food costs; a washer and dryer, which could mean less luggage; and the invaluable perspective you get from rubbing shoulders with the locals. "So if you like saving money and feeling more like a traveler than a tourist, consider a short-stay apartment for your next extended trip," he says. "And buy your own damned mints." ___ On The Net: Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| When Renting Vacation Homes, Ask Lots Of Questions (CBS News) Posted: 22 Mar 2010 10:12 AM PDT
She was stunned - and angry - when she discovered that the third bedroom of the rental property was down a narrow, steep set of stairs under a kitchen trapdoor, half hidden by a scatter rug. "My son volunteered to play dungeon boy and took the basement accommodation," Hurley said. "When he wanted to enter the living area, he had to pound on his ceiling - our floor - so we could open the trap door to let him up!" When Hurley got home, she complained to VRBO.com, where she booked the rental online, but ultimately decided not to go through with a formal complaint. The disappointing experience in 2008 hasn't stopped her from renting on VRBO.com, which stands for vacation rentals by owner. For 10 years her family has stayed at the same Florida villa she found on VRBO. And last Christmas, she rented a "stunning" log house on 10 acres outside Woodstock, N.Y., also from VRBO. The vacation rental market - booking a vacation property directly from the owner or from a property management company - is booming. A study released in 2009 by the travel industry research firm PhoCusWright Inc. estimated the market to be $24.3 billion or more than a fifth of the U.S. lodging industry (based on room revenue) of $107 billion in 2007. Alexis de Belloy, vice president of U.S. business at HomeAway, Inc., the world's largest vacation rental marketplace and owner of sites including HomeAway.com, VRBO.com and VacationRentals.com, says HomeAway facilitates more than 300,000 bookings a month with only a "handful of instances" of unsatisfactory rentals. While he wasn't familiar with the particulars of Hurley's complaint, he says HomeAway has a staff of 100 who do customer support including investigate complaints. Documentation of a problem can lead to a listing being taken down. He also notes that the company offers rental insurance up to $10,000 that protects against Internet fraud and foreclosure, with the average cost for insurance about $44. The demand for vacation rentals is being driven by a number of factors: a large supply of second homes, some purchased as investments; more travel by large, multi-generational groups including for family reunions; and economies of scale which can make a vacation rental a better value than hotels, especially for longer stays. Another driver is the Internet, which lets both rental companies and individual homeowners go online to market their homes. But the industry is relatively new, fragmented and unregulated. Consider that Conrad Hilton purchased his first hotel in 1919 and that HomeAway was launched in 2006. When HomeAway ran a Super Bowl ad this year featuring Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo in a reprise of their roles as the Griswolds from the 1983 hit comedy "National Lampoon Vacation," it marked a sort of coming-of-age for the industry. As with any new thing, consumers need to be cautious. Web photos can be deceiving. Online reviews can be planted by people with an agenda, good or bad. Even if a glowing review were once true, properties deteriorate if they aren't maintained. What can a would-be renter do? Insist on a rental agreement. Pay with a credit card. Ask lots of questions, by phone as well as e-mail. Ask for references. Take out rental insurance. Inquire about extra fees. Find out how and when you'll get back your security deposit. Also this: Keep records. Make photos or videos of substandard conditions. Complain promptly if there's a problem. Seek out the Better Business Bureau if you feel you were victimized. Finally, know your needs. If you're traveling to a mountain hideaway in winter, who will plow the road to the main highway if there's a blizzard? Hurley's complaint about the "dungeon" third bedroom is mild compared to some of the horror stories online. John Romano, a vacation rental property owner who markets his properties on VRWD.com, which stands for Vacation Rentals Web Directory, started a companion site in 2006 called Vacation Rentals Watchdog - VRWD.org - where people can go to gripe. There you'll find scary stories about people who put down thousands of dollars in security deposits and travel hundreds or thousands of miles only to discover stained couches, cobweb-covered grills, dilapidated patio furniture, ant infestations - and worse. Some stick it out. Others take the loss, spending additional thousands of dollars for alternative lodging. Even rentals that don't turn out to be a disaster can still be inconvenient and provide a few heart-stopping moments. Alicia Cackley, an executive with the federal government, took her 79-year-old parents to Italy a few years ago, booking apartments online in Rome, Assisi and Lucca. All went well until they got to Lucca, where they planned to stay for a week and a half, taking day trips to Florence. The stone guest house on a larger estate was farther outside the city than she had expected and had very little heat - in October. "Heat is not an amenity," Cackley observed. "We sat around wrapped up in blankets." After three nights they moved out and she had to scramble to find new lodgings in town - without speaking Italian. Such cautionary tales resonate with me because of my own experience last December, when my husband and I rented a studio apartment in Paris for 11 days through VRBO. We arrived to discover no heat in the kitchen or bathroom, peeling wallpaper, rusty burners on the stovetop, broken light fixtures, and clumps of hair and dust on the floor. The worst moment, perhaps, was when the bed frame collapsed when we lay down to take a nap a few hours after arriving. After staying one night - the owner came that evening to repair the bed frame with packing tape - we moved into a hotel. Since we had paid the deposit by credit card, we disputed the charge and received a conditional credit. In addition, the owner refunded us three nights (minus a 50 euro fee) because he rented the place those nights. We complained to VRBO after returning to the U.S. and found their Trust & Security Team professional and responsive. Over the next few weeks, we discovered reams about the vacation rental industry - the hard way. One is that VRBO is "not a party to any rental transaction" and "the truth and accuracy of the listings are solely the responsibility of each user." That disclaimer can be found by clicking the Terms and Conditions link at the bottom of the home page. Yet despite my story and others like it, many people find great properties for good value. Douglas Quinby, senior director of research at PhoCusWright, found that 89 percent of people who booked vacation rentals say they'd do it again within three years. And the marketplace is growing. FlipKey.com was launched in 2008 to help vacation rental property managers and owners promote guest reviews. In contrast to sites that let anyone post, FlipKey collects reviews by sending e-mails to people who actually stayed at a property. Last fall saw the launch of another business model, SecondPorch.com, which lets people list and find vacation rentals through social networks like Facebook. Greg Gross, who blogs about travel at I'm Black & I Travel!, sings the praises of vacation rentals in a post about an apartment he rented in Paris last summer. "If you simply must have someone else making your bed and leaving a mint on your pillow every day, this may not be for you," he warns. Then he goes on to list the advantages: a real kitchen, which cuts down on food costs; a washer and dryer, which could mean less luggage; and the invaluable perspective you get from rubbing shoulders with the locals. "So if you like saving money and feeling more like a traveler than a tourist, consider a short-stay apartment for your next extended trip," he says. "And buy your own damned mints." ___ On The Net: http://www.bbb.org/ http://imblacknitravel.com/ http://www.homeaway.com/ http://www.vrwd.org/ http://www.flipkey.com/ http://www.secondporch.com/ http://www.phocuswright.com/ http://www.discovervacationhomes.com/ Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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