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I know the standard when I've stayed at hotels that do accept cash (AKA Debit) they wan't $100 or more as collateral, I assume to avoid the whole problem you just described.

However, what I didn't know, which I soon realised was that the hotels pre-authorization hits like $500 on a room I pay $50 for a night. I found this out when I'd just moved country, had zero-credit, had a single $1000 visa card and was planning on putting a weekend away with my wife on credit so I'd have two pay checks in before I had to fork out the cash.

The worst was when we booked a campsite out of season. It cost us $14 a night and they required booking by credit card. They had $500 pre-authorized for over two weeks until we'd stayed, and I paid them cash. It's absolutely absurd.

Thankfully since the hotel incident we've always kept a burner credit card for things like this. I don't get the logic behind extending someone credit and then allowing it to be held-up in pre-authorization that will never get processed for the full amount when the credit could be spent at a restaurant or something.




Authorizing an amount, but never capturing it ('capture' is the industry term IIRC) is a hack on the system so far as I'm concerned.

1) I've gotten security calls from banks before just because some gas stations were authorizing the card for $100 prior to capturing for the actual amount of the gas. It even took the person on the phone a while to tease out that it was a $100 auth and not a $100 purchase.

2) The hotels a authorizing for a large amount because they want to make sure that you can pay for damage. They don't care if it goes on your credit. They get their money, then payment just becomes a matter between you and your credit card company. Note that not all hotels will authorize for $500.

  > I don't get the logic behind extending someone credit and
  > then allowing it to be held-up in pre-authorization that
  > will never get processed for the full amount
Technically, the full amount can be captured until the authorization expires or they capture for a smaller amount. That is why. They don't want you to max out the card, and then have a $500 capture that they weren't expecting. Oops! You're $1500 in debt now on a credit card with a limit of $1000!




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