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Is the JPM code safe to use at Marriott Bonvoy?
⚠️ Medium Risk risk. About 1 in 6 Marriott check-ins result in a verification request. A work email confirmation or business card usually satisfies.
Code: JPM · Company: JP Morgan Chase · Discount: 10-18% · Region: Global
Proof of eligibility to bring if asked: Business card or work email. Verification is more common in: Japan · China · Middle East.
Traveler Reports
Updated 2 hours ago
"JP Morgan Chase's Marriott code JPM is a high-profile financial institution code. FlyerTalk's "Corporate ID required???" thread specifically mentions financial sector codes in NYC/Chicago as more likely to be audited: "The SF Marriott was specifically noted for cracking down on corporate code abuse." Chase has massive employee headcount (250,000+) making verification less targeted, but JPMorgan's Marriott discount at full-service NYC/Chicago properties can be substantial. hotelcorporatecodes.com: "⚠️ Sometimes." Business travel hubs (Manhattan, Chicago Loop) carry higher risk."
— FlyerTalk Corporate ID thread; hotelcorporatecodes.com
"I mean, it depends on the size of the hotel. Having one person on night shift for a Fairfield isn’t uncommon. The better hotels have more people working at front desk even at night simply due to the size and brand. I’d however say though, if the property has been notified of the guest’s check in time in advance, and part of deal of getting into night shift is to check people in at unusual hours like that, then it certainly does not sound right to me that the front desk agent cannot have the meal earlier or later out of that many hours of the shift."
— charmdude
"I have a close friend who is a GM at a Marriott property in a fairly large US city (top 25 metro population). Their opinion is basically, "Hey, it's business. I'm not turning away a paying guest if they don't have the right ID." In this person's younger days as a front desk agent, they enjoyed catching people trying to use a corporate rate that the guest was not entitled to. As they became higher up and saw the books, occupancy rates, etc... Corp ID's became far less important than filling rooms."
— FlyerTalk_User