tammymacb Posted February 6, 2014 #1 Share Posted February 6, 2014 I'm sorry Carnival gurus. I know you answer these questions all the time, but when even Carnival staff has different answers to the same question, I have to throw up my hands. We're sailing in April. Two rooms booked on ES rate. My DH is the lead in one room, booked ES but is retired military and eligible for Carnival military rates- and has sailed with military rates in the past. Currently the price of his room is $799 PLUS a $50 SBC that was part of a military deal last month. Today the price of the cruise dropped to $749. In the past, I was told that the credits were totally separate from the price drop. Recently, though, this hasn't been the case. They've given the lower rate and taken the SBC back. So, if I put in a price drop for the $50 price difference, should Carnival A- Drop the price to $749 and leave the $50 attached to the room or B- Drop the price to $749 and take back the $50 SBC which basically is a wash and is not a price drop for us? Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nitro2448 Posted February 6, 2014 #2 Share Posted February 6, 2014 I'm sorry Carnival gurus. I know you answer these questions all the time, but when even Carnival staff has different answers to the same question, I have to throw up my hands. We're sailing in April. Two rooms booked on ES rate. My DH is the lead in one room, booked ES but is retired military and eligible for Carnival military rates- and has sailed with military rates in the past. Currently the price of his room is $799 PLUS a $50 SBC that was part of a military deal last month. Today the price of the cruise dropped to $749. In the past, I was told that the credits were totally separate from the price drop. Recently, though, this hasn't been the case. They've given the lower rate and taken the SBC back. So, if I put in a price drop for the $50 price difference, should Carnival A- Drop the price to $749 and leave the $50 attached to the room or B- Drop the price to $749 and take back the $50 SBC which basically is a wash and is not a price drop for us? Thanks. If your OBC is linked to a specific fare code and you change that fare code, then yes you will lose that OBC. So in this case yes you would lose that $50 OBC for the military rate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bigman01 Posted February 6, 2014 #3 Share Posted February 6, 2014 (edited) I'm sorry Carnival gurus. I know you answer these questions all the time, but when even Carnival staff has different answers to the same question, I have to throw up my hands. We're sailing in April. Two rooms booked on ES rate. My DH is the lead in one room, booked ES but is retired military and eligible for Carnival military rates- and has sailed with military rates in the past. Currently the price of his room is $799 PLUS a $50 SBC that was part of a military deal last month. Today the price of the cruise dropped to $749. In the past, I was told that the credits were totally separate from the price drop. Recently, though, this hasn't been the case. They've given the lower rate and taken the SBC back. So, if I put in a price drop for the $50 price difference, should Carnival A- Drop the price to $749 and leave the $50 attached to the room or B- Drop the price to $749 and take back the $50 SBC which basically is a wash and is not a price drop for us? Thanks. I'm assuming by SBC you mean OBC - On Board Credit? If so, the correct answer is B - you will lose the $50 OBC. If you switch to another fare that doesn't include OBC, you will lose that OBC ordinarilly. When comparing prices, you need to look at your base price, then deduct any promotional OBC that was included with whatever rate you booked. In your example, you paid $799, so when you deduct the $50 OBC, the price you need to use when checking for rate drops is $749. Anything less than $749 and you'd qualify for a rate drop (but again, you'd lose the $50 OBC if you price match to a new rate). Hope that helps! Edited February 6, 2014 by bigman01 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bigman01 Posted February 6, 2014 #4 Share Posted February 6, 2014 Looks like nitro2448 was quicker than me! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
firemanbobswife Posted February 6, 2014 #5 Share Posted February 6, 2014 The answer is B Now if the new rate has OBC attached to it - $749 plus $50 OBC, then that's what it will be. If it is just straight up $749, no OBC, then that's what it will be - $50 OBC goes away. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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