Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a pretty good travel card (Chase sapphire) and I don’t think they would cover this. It doesn’t meet the criteria.
That's what I was thinking too- seems like they would have needed the type of travel insurance where you can trulu cancel for any reason but that tends to be pretty expensive and not what most people get.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are supposed to stay at Fairmont Mayakoba later this week. The hotel says nothing is wrong at the hotel, so they won’t refund.
Any thoughts on how to deal with this? We are not inclined to bring our two kids to Mexico at this point.
It wasn’t a good idea when you booked either. Oh well, now you know.
I agree. My family refuses to travel anywhere in Mexico for any reason bc of cartels. Our friends think we are insane and frequently travel to all the tourist hotspots all over Mexico. They rave about the gorgeous resorts etc. Not worth it to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:News flash: Mexico is dangerous! Cartels vie for power with a generally inept, corrupt, and ineffective government. Who knew?
So it’s like DC and Chicago?
Anonymous wrote:I had a pretty good travel card (Chase sapphire) and I don’t think they would cover this. It doesn’t meet the criteria.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's life OP. I had booked a hotel to visit my kid in one of the cities that now shutdown by the blizzard. I cancelled the reservation but having prepaid I'm not entitled to a refund. I wish I could get the money back, but sometimes you lose. I'd rather lose some money than get caught up in a cartel war.
A consumer-friendly hotel would make it right. Our flight to HI was delayed by a day and the hotel agreed not to charge us the first night. We had insurance that would have covered the charge, but it was easier and nicer for the hotel to just be considerate.
Anonymous wrote:To those saying use travel insurance or the credit card insurance - there is usually carve outs for terrorism, acts of war, etc, so I wouldn’t count on anything here being covered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are supposed to stay at Fairmont Mayakoba later this week. The hotel says nothing is wrong at the hotel, so they won’t refund.
Any thoughts on how to deal with this? We are not inclined to bring our two kids to Mexico at this point.
It wasn’t a good idea when you booked either. Oh well, now you know.
I agree. My family refuses to travel anywhere in Mexico for any reason bc of cartels. Our friends think we are insane and frequently travel to all the tourist hotspots all over Mexico. They rave about the gorgeous resorts etc. Not worth it to me.
You were insane. Prior to yesterday, the cartels did not mess with you if you did not mess with them. It was perfectly safe for the average tourist. However, things have changed now. Tourists might become collateral targets.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't go. No fear of sunk costs is going to cause me to put my family at risk.
Anonymous wrote:That's life OP. I had booked a hotel to visit my kid in one of the cities that now shutdown by the blizzard. I cancelled the reservation but having prepaid I'm not entitled to a refund. I wish I could get the money back, but sometimes you lose. I'd rather lose some money than get caught up in a cartel war.
Anonymous wrote:Depending on what credit card you used to book it, it may be insured.
Anonymous wrote:To those saying use travel insurance or the credit card insurance - there is usually carve outs for terrorism, acts of war, etc, so I wouldn’t count on anything here being covered.
Anonymous wrote:-Talk to your credit card company
-See if you can push your reservation out X weeks/months, once the situation has settled you may be inclined to go or they might also let you cancel later
-Post on SM tagging them, I bet fairmont corp would be interested to know they are doing this
-Charge back using the travel advisory