No refund for the wrong Chichen Itza tour

itzaQuestion: I’m trying to get a refund for a tour, and I’m getting the runaround. Last year, my husband, my niece, and I traveled to Cancun for two weeks. Before our departure, I asked my travel agent for a reputable tour company since I wanted to book a tour to Chichen Itza, a popular pre-Columbian archaeological site. She recommended Grayline.

I went online and I booked an overnight tour that included a light show and a room at the Mayaland Hotel, as well as access to the grounds in the evening. This cost me $99 per person.

When we got to Cancun, I got the concierge at my hotel to confirm the arrangements. She phoned and I thought it was all set.

When we arrived, we were told that we were booked on the day trip. This did not include the light show. When I explained that I had paid for the overnight trip, the woman at the counter told me there were no hotel rooms available at all. There was nothing she could do. She also told me that she couldn’t issue a refund since I had booked on the Internet. She told me to get my refund through the Web site.

I have contacted Grayline Cancun several times in the past year. Each and every time, I am promised a refund. Each time, they fail to deliver it. Can you help? — Nancy Giese, Swan Hills, Alberta, Canada

Answer: Grayline should have refunded the difference between the day tour and your overnight tour as quickly as it took the company to withdraw the money from your credit card. Which is to say, instantly.

So why are you still waiting?

That’s a question a lot of travelers — from airline passengers to hotel guests — struggle to answer every day. Travel companies are quick to take your money and slow to return it, even when you have every right to a prompt refund. The best explanation is that they want to keep your money, and they figure that dragging their feet increases the chances you’ll give up.

But not you. You copied me on several e-mail requests to Grayline Cancun, in which you politely and persistently asked for your money. Grayline’s terms and conditions — you can read them here — are clear about giving its customers refunds: it doesn’t. “All tickets purchased on www.grayline.com are nonrefundable,” it says.

Curiously, while the Grayline’s terms address your own behavior to an interesting level of detail (“You will only provide truthful and accurate information. You will not harass, threaten or abuse other people when using this site in any manner.”), it doesn’t really talk about the company’s obligations to you. Too bad. Obviously, the company should adjust the rate you paid for your Chichen Itza tour immediately.

While you dealt directly with the Cancun location, you had three other options. You could have appealed to Grayline at the corporate level. You could have disputed the charges on your credit card. And you could have sued Grayline in a Canadian Small Claims Court.

Fortunately, you didn’t need to do any of those things. I contacted Grayline on your behalf, and it sent you a full refund.

(Photo: Elvis Pépin/Flickr Creative Commons)

  • http://n/a Charles L Ruffner

    I had a similar experience earlier this year with Greyhound in Rio de Janiero, Brasil. I booked it on the internet while in the USA and paid via credit card. The tour that they offered was a disaster. And to top it all off they dropped us off on a dark street corner in a bad area in the rain instead of taking us back to our hotel at the end of the tour as the terms of the contract provided. I dealt with the U.S.A. customer service manager for Greyhound, and after initially refusing to make more than a token refund they gave in and refunded the full price of the tour. I guess the fact that I am a lawyer may have played a part in their ultimate largesse.

  • Justin

    Good work. Unfortunately, sometimes the effort is worth more than the trouble. How much could she have gotten back on the difference? 20 or 30 dollars? Sure, in this economy, that’s a lot of money. However, to beat down someone’s door over it really isn’t going to help. I am glad you were able to solve it for her. The company should have NEVER kept her money. Can we say IMMEDIATE red flag.

    Here’s a question. When a company BREACHES it’s obligation to you to perform a service, aren’t they liable for damages? I guess they probably have some limiting clause in there that you can’t sue for beyond what you paid, anyhow.

  • Carver

    I’d be curious to know how prevalent is the problem of slow refunds. I’ve gotten refunds from Marriott, Hilton Garden Inn, American Airlines, and even the Le Meridien in Paris, France. None took more than 7 days and were all pretty painless.

    I do fault American Airlines in that a cancelled ticket doesn’t automatically generate a refund request.

  • GSA

    Re: She also told me that she couldn’t issue a refund since I had booked on the Internet. She told me to get my refund through the Web site.

    This is a common occurance at the hotel I work at also. Was it a repuatable 3rd party website? And why was there only verbal confirmation occuring? No matter where you are traveling, bring a printed confirmation page with you just in case.

  • Carver

    @GSA

    Amen to that. Always have a printed confirmation. It makes it alot harder to argue with you when its in black and white.

  • Brian

    @Charles L Rufner

    Are you referring to Grey Lines? Greyhound is a completely different company.

  • Kelly

    Why didn’t she book this through her travel agent? I would suspect the travel agency would have handled this for her.