We believe everyone should be able to make financial decisions with
confidence. While we don't cover every company or financial product on
the market, we work hard to share a wide range of offers and objective
editorial perspectives.
So how do we make money? Our partners compensate us for advertisements that
appear on our site. This compensation helps us provide tools and services -
like free credit score access and monitoring. With the exception of
mortgage, home equity and other home-lending products or services, partner
compensation is one of several factors that may affect which products we
highlight and where they appear on our site. Other factors include your
credit profile, product availability and proprietary website methodologies.
However, these factors do not influence our editors' opinions or ratings, which are based on independent research and analysis. Our partners cannot
pay us to guarantee favorable reviews. Here is a list of our partners.
Priceline: Everything You Need To Know
Priceline is an online travel agency that can get you great deals — if you're OK with not knowing the exact hotel.
Sally French is co-host of the Smart Travel podcast and a writer on NerdWallet's travel team. Before joining NerdWallet as a travel rewards expert in 2020, she wrote about travel and credit cards for The New York Times and its sibling site, Wirecutter.
Outside of work, she loves fitness, and she competes in both powerlifting and weightlifting (she can deadlift more than triple bodyweight). Naturally, her travels always involve a fitness component, including a week of cycling up the coastline of Vietnam and a camping trip to the Arctic Circle, where she biked over the sea ice. Other adventures have included hiking 25 miles in one day through Italy's Cinque Terre and climbing the 1,260 steps to Tiger Cave Temple in Krabi, Thailand.
Megan Lee is a former editor on the travel rewards team at NerdWallet. She had more than 12 years of SEO, writing and content development experience, primarily in international education and nonprofit work. She has been published in U.S. News & World Report, USA Today and elsewhere, and has spoken at conferences like that of NAFSA: Association of International Educators. Megan has built and directed remote content teams and editorial strategies for websites like GoAbroad and Go Overseas. When not traveling, Megan adventures around her Midwest home base where she likes to attend theme parties, ride her bike and cook Asian food.
Updated
How is this page expert verified?
NerdWallet's content is fact-checked for accuracy, timeliness and
relevance. It undergoes a thorough review process involving
writers and editors to ensure the information is as clear and
complete as possible.
This page includes information about these cards, currently unavailable on
NerdWallet. The information has been collected by NerdWallet and has not
been provided or reviewed by the card issuer.
Priceline.com is an online travel agency known for its discount rates on travel purchases including hotels, airfare, rental cars and cruises — oh, and maybe those William Shatner ads.
Priceline claims that it saves customers more than $1 billion every year through its many deal campaigns, which include Express Deals, Tonight-Only Deals and Pricebreakers. Priceline VIP loyalty members can get even more discounts.
But have Priceline deals really gone where no man (or online travel agency) has gone before? Here’s what you need to know about booking with and saving money through Priceline.
How does Priceline work?
Priceline is a part of the world’s largest travel company, Booking Holdings, which also operates other big travel players including Kayak, Rentalcars.com and OpenTable.
Accessible via priceline.com or its mobile app, Priceline delivers personalized recommendations for travelers, including nontraditional accommodations like private homes, boats and yurts. Travelers can bundle lodging, flights and rental cars together in one transaction — and often for a deal.
You enter in your dates and destination, and Priceline lists flights, hotels, and rental cars that can get you there. As an OTA, Priceline facilitates the booking. Meanwhile, the actual travel services are provided by someone else — whether it’s a massive hotel chain or a small, family-owned bed and breakfast.
Priceline offers fairly robust booking tools, especially for travelers who like to book all their trip components — flight, hotel and rental car — in one go, rather than separately.
Priceline’s Trip Builder platform lets users bundle those purchases together into one transaction, while also unlocking privately negotiated rates that are otherwise unavailable. Priceline claims its bundled deals save travelers an average of $240 per transaction.
And the Trip Builder tool is fairly flexible. Bundling features on other websites can be limiting. Sometimes, they force you to book a flight (even if you would have preferred a road trip), or don’t allow for stopovers in multiple cities.
In contrast, Trip Builder accounts for individual travel circumstances and removes many restrictions found elsewhere. Your trip can include a mix of stays between private homes and hotels. You can also opt to bundle a trip that doesn’t involve a flight.
Priceline's most famous deal, Name Your Own Price, has been retired. The Name Your Own Price deal was a bidding tool where you could negotiate hotel rates up to 60% off retail, and airfare up to 40% off retail rates.
There are still plenty of other Priceline promos to be had.
Subscribe to our free TravelNerd newsletter for inspiration, tips and money-saving strategies, delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you will receive newsletters and promotional
content and agree to our Terms of Use
and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Express Deals
Express Deals launched in 2012 with a promise to offer the same savings as bidding, but with an instant-booking component. Perhaps the most standout aspect of Express Deals: You don’t know the actual name of the hotel or flight when you book, but it could save you as much as 50%.
With the flight version of the Express Deals function, you won’t receive your exact departure and arrival times until after you purchase tickets. Instead, you’re given only an approximate arrival or departure time, such as in the early morning.
Ahead of booking hotels through Express Deals, you get some information, such as star rating, customer rating, the neighborhood and the amenities. The actual hotel is revealed only once the booking is made.
There are a few tricks for how to uncover the identity of your Priceline hotels before purchasing. But ultimately, it can often turn out to be exactly what it’s advertised as — a mystery until after you buy.
Pricebreakers
If you like having a somewhat better idea of the hotel you’ll get but still like the gamble, turn to the Pricebreakers deal, which launched in 2020. Consider it a bit of hotel roulette, but this time, you get one of three known options.
With Pricebreakers, three separate (but similar) hotels are displayed, each listed under a single price. Upon booking that Pricebreakers deal, you’ll get a reservation for one of those specific hotels — though the exact one is chosen by Priceline.
Priceline promises that every hotel booked through Pricebreakers has a customer rating above 7 out of 10 and is offered at up to half off published rates you can find elsewhere.
Available only through its app, the Tonight-Only Deals promotion offers last-minute hotel deals in most major cities including Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Honolulu, Houston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego and San Francisco.
With Tonight-Only Deals, Priceline’s app displays 3-star and 4-star hotel rooms that can be booked for check-in that same night (with a maximum four-night stay) at discounts of up to 35% off published prices found elsewhere. Room reservations can be instantly booked up until 11 p.m. local time, or until they sell out.
Recurring annual sales
Like many travel booking sites, Priceline also runs periodic sales during certain times of year. Cyber Monday and Black Friday are big deal-nabbing opportunities on Priceline.
For example, during the 2021 Black Friday weekend, 2,000 lucky customers received a coupon code that offered 99% off Express Deal hotels. For everyone else, Priceline sent out Black Friday coupons for up to an additional 30% off of Express Deals on top of everyday savings of up to 60% off.
Priceline VIP loyalty program
All those deals aren’t the only way you can save when booking with Priceline. Priceline VIP is the OTA’s loyalty program that includes access to extra discounts, coupons, premium customer service and more.
There are four tiers of elite status in the Priceline VIP program: Member, Blue, Gold and Platinum. Joining the program is free — you just have to create an account with Priceline.
Here’s how to earn Priceline elite status, and what each tier entails:
Member
Blue
Gold
Platinum
How to earn
Sign up.
Complete two trips with Priceline.
Complete five trips with Priceline (also automatically granted to Priceline Rewards Visa Card holders).
Complete 25 trips with Priceline.
VIP rental car discounts
Up to 10%.
Up to 15%.
Up to 20%.
Up to 20%.
Hotel savings
Up to 10%.
Up to 50% on over 15,000 hotels.
Up to 50% on over 30,000 hotels.
Up to 50% on over 45,000 hotels.
Insider Coupons
5% Express Deal coupon after every trip.
5% Express Deal coupon after every trip.
8% Express Deal coupon after every trip.
10% Express Deal coupon after every trip.
Premium customer service
N/A.
N/A.
Priority.
First Priority.
Unlike other elite status programs, there are no special seat upgrades or free goodies like Champagne in your hotel room with Priceline VIP. But for no-frills travelers who value saving money over amenities, the discounts might be the most valuable perk anyway. Properties eligible for VIP discounts are designated by a Priceline VIP logo in the search results.
Look for this Priceline VIP logo on listings to indicate extra discounts for members.
Something that sets Priceline VIP apart from other loyalty programs is that your Priceline elite status does not expire. Instead, you keep your same tier level from year to year until you advance.
To reach the next level, though, you’ll have to have completed new qualifying trips after Jan. 1 of that year (so trips completed in previous years do not count toward earning elite status).
While not necessarily the best credit card to use for general everyday spending, the Priceline VIP Rewards™ Visa® Card is one of the best cards to use for purchases on Priceline itself. It earns 5 points for every $1 spent on purchases, bookings and reservations made at Priceline. It also earns 2 points on restaurant and gas purchases, and 1 point for everything else.
Priceline points are worth 1 cent, so you’re looking at a 5% return for all your Priceline purchases on this card. What’s also nice is that you can redeem your rewards as statement credits, so you’re not necessarily suckered into earning points in a loyalty program you might not regularly use.
Other benefits of card ownership include automatic Priceline VIP Gold status. And if you spend $10,000 on the card within each card membership year, you’re eligible to receive a statement credit for the $100 Global Entry application fee or the $78 TSA PreCheck application fee.
Considering the Priceline VIP Rewards™ Visa® Card has a $0 annual fee, it’s hard to be too harsh on this card. Plus, the extra benefits can be quite a money-saver.
NerdWallet's ratings are determined by our editorial team. The scoring formula takes into account the type of card being reviewed (such as cash back, travel or balance transfer) and the card's rates, fees, rewards and other features.
This card is convenient not just for spending on Priceline, but all sorts of travel purchases.
For all your non-Priceline bookings, use this card to earn 5 points per dollar on travel booked through Chase. You’ll also earn 3 points per dollar on dining at restaurants, streaming services and online grocery purchases; 2 points per dollar on other travel spending (including online travel websites like Expedia); and 1 point per dollar spent on everything else.
The card, which has an annual fee of $95, also features an introductory offer: Earn 75,000 bonus points after you spend $5,000 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening.
Priceline has an abundance of deals, particularly for travelers who are flexible about where they stay and when they travel. But for all the delights of booking on Priceline, there are pitfalls too — and cancellations rank among the biggest.
Many of the deepest discounts cannot be changed or canceled, period. That includes Express Deals (the deals where the full itinerary is revealed only after you book), which are non-changeable and nonrefundable.
For other bookings outside of Priceline’s mystery deals, change and cancellation policies vary. Often, whether your travel can be refunded is up to the provider’s policy, not Priceline’s. A basic economy flight might not qualify for a refund, but an upgraded ticket might.
And in some cases, you might be able to change your reservation — but only for a fee. Again, fees vary by provider, but can be reviewed within your online itinerary.
How to cancel a Priceline booking
If your reservation is eligible for cancellation, you can use Priceline’s self-service cancellation tool. From a logged-in Priceline account, click the My Trips button and select View/Cancel Itinerary next to the reservation you want to cancel.
Be sure to read the individual policy for each cancellation, as they can vary in terms of how much money you’ll actually get back.
You can also cancel flights by calling Priceline’s Customer Care number at 800-774-2354.
How to contact Priceline
Use the Priceline Help Center for help with situations like changing and canceling your trip, getting a refund or filing a complaint. If you’re unable to get help from Priceline’s self-service tools, there are a few other ways to get in touch with support:
NerdWallet writers are subject matter authorities who use primary,
trustworthy sources to inform their work, including peer-reviewed
studies, government websites, academic research and interviews with
industry experts. All content is fact-checked for accuracy, timeliness
and relevance. You can learn more about NerdWallet's high
standards for journalism by reading our
editorial guidelines.