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How to do a hotel mattress run – and what can go wrong

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What is a hotel mattress run, and how do you do one?

I thought I would take a look at the concept of ‘mattress runs’ today.  A ‘mattress run’ involves booking a hotel room without the intention of spending the night, purely for the purpose of triggering a promotional bonus.

Take a look at this photograph:

How to do a hotel mattress run

I think a few HfP readers will recognise it.

Why? Because it’s the Moxy Heathrow Airport. This is usually the cheapest Marriott Bonvoy hotel in London, and in the last few weeks you’ve been able to combine:

  • generous American Express cashback deals (£100 back on £300 spend, £75 back on £200 spend) and
  • double elite night credits – each night you stay counts as two nights towards status requalification or status upgrade (this offer ends tomorrow)

If you paid £75 per night, four nights would have cost £300. Amex would have given you £100 cashback if you were targetted for the offer. You’d have spent £200 net for eight elite night credits and, adding in the current bonus points offer and an elite status bonus, around 8,600 Marriott Bonvoy points. I’d value those at around £45.

Would you pay £155 net (£300 – £100 Amex credit – £45 of points) for eight Marriott Bonvoy elite night credits? Quite a few people would. All you need to do is pop into the hotel, check in and leave.

Why would you do a mattress run?

Hotel company promotions often incentivise you to make stays which are unnecessary.  

In 2021, for example, we looked at a ‘new member’ offer from IHG. Do two stays, however cheap, and you got a voucher for a free night worth around £150 (ie 40,000 IHG One Rewards points).

If you had a Holiday Inn Express near you which sold for £39 on quiet Friday or Sunday nights, you could have made a ‘profit’ of £70 by making two bookings even if you don’t need a hotel.

How to do a hotel mattress run

Do you physically have to check in at the hotel?

YES.  It is very clear in the rules of all hotel loyalty schemes that you must turn up and check-in for your stay to be treated as ‘qualifying’.

Some people fail to see the logic here.  If this rule was not in place, however, it would lead to super-cheap hotels in Asia being block booked by people who never arrived.  As hotels generally rely on additional spending in the bars and restaurants to make money, even the hotel owners who got the bookings would not be happy.

What about chains like Hilton and Marriott which offer online check-in?

It doesn’t matter.  In most cases you still need to pick up a key at reception to be considered as checked in.

There is an outside chance that mobile check-in may work.  To be honest, based on reader feedback, it is more like a fairly decent chance.

I had a non-refundable Marriott booking a couple of years ago which I couldn’t make, but checked in via the app and got the stay credit for it.  Don’t rely on this though – you certainly can’t complain if the points don’t arrive.

what is a hotel mattress run

How do you deal with check out?

When I’ve done this for one night, I just leave the key on the bed or desk and depart.  This is surprisingly common behaviour even among guests who do stay the night.  I have never had a problem with this.

If you’re staying more than one night, you need to be careful. You can mess the bed up for the first night (see below) but after that the staff will clearly see that you are not there. If you live nearby you can keep popping in. If you have to travel to the property, you may need to let the front desk know that you won’t necessarily be around all the time and to not check you out.

Do you mess up the bed?

This is a controversial one!  Yes, I admit on a one night mattress run that I do like to pretend that I stayed the night by messing up the bedding and sometimes even running the shower and wetting a towel.

Would the hotel care otherwise?  Probably not.

In these days of wall-mounted bottles, you can no longer steal the toiletry miniatures to offset the cost of your stay!

What about the bill?

It is never an issue.  You can usually get a copy of your bill online if necessary.  By definition, you are likely to be doing mattress runs at very cheap hotels – the sort which are prepaid anyway.  There is unlikely to be a mini bar so you are unlikely to face mistaken mini bar charges.

How to do a hotel mattress run

Can someone else check in for me?

In theory, yes.  But this can go wrong, as I found out a couple of years ago.

I have, many times, booked a room in the name of someone else for a mattress run.  Many hotel booking systems let you add multiple names to a booking so you can add yourself as ‘second guest’ and put in the notes that you will check in first.

Once, however, I booked a room for a friend at a Holiday Inn Express hotel.  I had a friend who needed a room in a cheap regional city.  I needed an extra night to hit my IHG promotion target.  I offered to pay for a room for him, because it was cheaper than any London hotel I could visit for a mattress run and I saved a few hours of my time.

I booked and prepaid the room, and he and his wife made the stay.  I honestly can’t remember if I added him or his wife name as the 2nd guest or not.  However, IHG refused to give me points for the stay on the grounds that I did not stay there myself.

The bill for the room had my name on it.  However, the credit card handed over at check in for incidentals which were never used was obviously not mine.  If his wife had handed over her card it would presumably have been OK.  However, as it was clear that the male guest was not me from his credit card, IHG’s system seems to have automatically flagged up that I was not there.  This was the first time that this ever happened to me.

There is another issue with this approach.

A few years ago I did a mattress run on my wife’s IHG account at a Holiday Inn Express in Spain.  I was named on the reservations as 2nd guest.

However, it seems – under Spanish law, or at least the law in some cities – that the first named guest MUST turn up for the reservation to be valid.  Even though I was named as 2nd guest and the notes to the booking said that I would arrive first, I had major issues.  Luckily I had a credit card in her name on me.  The hotel agreed to swipe this for incidentals which would make it appear as if she had checked in.  I could easily have come unstuck with that one.

It is also worth noting that UK hotels seem to have become much stricter in asking for ID. When Rhys reviewed the Courtyard hotel at Luton Airport in 2020, which I booked in my name via my Marriott Bonvoy account, he had substantial difficulties checking in. Unsurprisingly they thought that someone at an airport hotel should have some sort of ID to hand.

Conclusion

In general, a mattress run should be relatively straightforward and I even find them fun.  Do one at a Moxy or Courtyard by Marriott, for example, and you’ll get the welcome drink and – if elite – $10 of food and drink credit so you can grab a snack too.

You can get to see, as I did seven years ago, exciting places like the Holiday Inn Brent Cross.  Don’t think that they are always trouble free, however, because they are not.


Hotel offers update – April 2024:

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from the major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Want to buy hotel points?

  • Hilton Honors is offering a 100% bonus when you buy points by 14th May 2024. Click here.

Comments (53)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    “When I’ve done this for one night, I just leave the key on the bed or desk and depart. This is surprisingly common behaviour even among guests who do stay the night.“

    Why is it surprising? Unless there is something to sort out at the desk, I thought this was the normal way of checking out and has been for the last 20 years?

    • Bagoly says:

      If I have time I like to check out at the desk, so I don’t find any additional items on the credit card later.

    • Phillip says:

      I’ve always felt that the done thing is to go via reception both during check in and out; but that’s just me. Even when checked in online. That said, I’ve had a lot of success checking out via the app, particularly Marriott’s, without issues and skipping reception. As Bagoly says, I like to know that the folio has been closed and there are no charging issues. That also depends if I’ve left an open tab at check in for incidentals or not. I do find it’s hit or miss getting invoices sent via e-mail after checking out.

      • YC says:

        I always ensure I get the folio sent the same day. The chat functionality allows u to easily follow up even after checking out

        • Phillip says:

          The chat function is definitely something I really appreciate with Marriott, not just for check out but also pre arrival communications.

    • mradey says:

      Agreed – I can’t remember the last time I ‘checked out’. I just pack and leave. I also take the room keys as my son collects them.

    • can2 says:

      That’s a lot of trusting. Not just the “resort fees”, but they sometimes make honest mistakes..

    • Rob says:

      Not if you stay at any hotel where other people could be charging stuff to your room.

      • The Savage Squirrel says:

        But you can check your bill from your room then leave?

        • meta says:

          You can always ask at any hotel to pay for incidentals as you go without the credit card authorisation. When I needed to do that, I never had an issue at either budget or luxury hotels.

  • Bagoly says:

    At Luton Courtyard did you not put Rhys as second guest?
    Nowadays gender is unlikely to make that difficult?

  • Joan says:

    I bought some extra Marriott Bonvoy points on their promotion 13 days ago as I needed more to book a room for a pre cruise stay in Miami . They say the points will be credited to the account within 72 hours . Despite numerous emails they still haven’t credited my points and now they say they need another 7/10 days to investigate ! I’m furious and I bet by the time I get these points the point cost for the hotel will have gone up. Anyone know who else I can complain to other than Customer Care because they are useless ☹️

    • Born2sKydive says:

      Sorry to hear you have been Bonvoyed. All the best in your quest.

    • The Original David says:

      Doesn’t Bonvoy do that thing where you can book the stay before you’ve earned the points? Provided you have them by the time you check in? Or did they stop doing that again?

      • Chrisasaurus says:

        They changed it so it didn’t lock the points rate a few years back anyway so wouldn’t have helped

        And then killed it recently altogether I think

  • Ian says:

    I booked the Hilton Garden Inn Heathrow recently on a non refundable rate but then couldn’t stay there. I checked in and out via the app and had the points and night credited to my account.

    • NorthernLass says:

      They will generally let you move your stay to another date if that happens. Hilton has far and away the best customer service IME.

  • John says:

    I’ve never been asked for a card when checking in to Holiday Inn Express, except once in the UK when they said they had a lot of fraud on prepaid bookings and wanted to preauth 1p in person, and once in Australia where I refused and they didn’t push it.

    Even if not prepaid, you just put the card in the reader and nobody needs to care about the name on the card… and not sure how IHG’s system is meant to know the name on the card anyway. (JDB is going to come along and say you are not supposed to use your wife’s card… well I’m going to check into a Crowne Plaza today and try to pay with my wife’s Amex as the amount is 5p more than needed to reach £300 for the offer, she won’t be there so let’s see if I get away with it)

    • TGLoyalty says:

      In most cases yup you just stick the card in and no one sees the name. However, not all work this way some take the card and tap the number into there system, even if they then hand over a card machine.

      Tbh I’ve just started getting Amex cards with just a surname or as few gender/name identifying letters as possible. Ie just an initial and no title.

      • SammyJ says:

        TGL Loyalty I did that – got one with just a surname on it, but then discovered that some car rental companies in the USA won’t accept it. In fact a few can be real sticklers and insist on the card displaying the full name, not just an initial. Just something to be aware of so you can have a backup plan if you plan to hire a car!

        • TGLoyalty says:

          Yeah I agree. I meant supps the main account holders card has a full name.

    • Rich says:

      Yep, he’s a stickler for the rules. Go for it, you only live once.

      • WaynedP says:

        In all of @JDB ‘s posts, I’ve never discerned any judgement of others who choose to circumvent the letter of the law/regulations/T&Cs about which @JDB is so knowledgeable, so can’t see any reason why anyone should take offence at his posts.

        He simply informs on the actual risks that many prefer to ignore when it suits.

        All insurance policies that I’ve ever seen have a blanket exclusion for cover in the event of any unlawful actions in the part of the policyholder.

        Using someone else’s credit card in their absence to pay your accommodation costs here or abroad jeopardises your wealth and welfare to a far greater extent than the benefit of garnering a cash back/Sign-Up Bonus/Loyalty Points or qualifying nights, and I’d wager that anyone who’s learned the hard way the lessons that @JDB takes the time and effort to highlight gratis would wholeheartedly endorse his sagacious warnings.

    • Andrew. says:

      The cardholder name is encoded into “track one” data for a swipe and the equivalent data for a tap or insert.

      It will appear on their system if it’s designed to display the encloded data.

      • Nick says:

        The self-order kiosks at some fast food places assign the name from a credit card to your order so staff can yell it out. Panera in the US does it and there’s no open out or override.

  • Davedent says:

    I stayed at the Moxy at Inverness for 14 nights once -left after the first night. They checked me out on day 7 saying I wasn’t in the room. I phoned up and said I was on a walking holiday and needed a hot shower when I got back and they checked me back in. The manager said strangely enough this happens a lot at this hotel – no coincidence it’s usually the cheapest Marriott in the UK.

  • omicron says:

    I’ve both successfully and unsuccessfully done “virtual” stays at super cheap hotels in Asia, so could be worth a try if you only need 1-2 nights…

  • Ed_fly says:

    Another top tip, make sure the hotel you book into earns points! I.e. Ibis budget may look like a cheap night to reset your 12 month ALL expiry, but doesn’t earn points.

    • Lady London says:

      In some countries, they do earn.

      • lumma says:

        Yeah, I’ve even booked an Ibis budget when it says no points earned and still a handful of avios turned up in my Iberia account

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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