Hotel Contract Negotiation for Events: The Complete Guide
The hotel contract is the most consequential document in your event lifecycle. A poorly negotiated contract can cost tens of thousands of euros in penalties or leave you unprotected when the unexpected happens. Event professionals who master contract negotiation consistently deliver better outcomes at lower risk.
The 8 Contract Clauses Every Event Planner Must Know
1. Cancellation Policy
Defines what percentage of the total event cost you forfeit if you cancel at various points before the event. The typical sliding scale: 90+ days = 25%, 60–89 days = 50%, 30–59 days = 75%, less than 30 days = 100%. Always negotiate for lower percentages in the intermediate bands and push for longer cut-off periods before the highest penalties kick in.
2. Attrition Clause
Defines the minimum number of attendees or room nights you must guarantee. Standard hotel terms require 85–90% of the committed block; if your group comes in below that, you pay for the unused rooms or the F&B shortfall. Negotiate attrition down to 75–80% and push for a final adjustment window of 10–14 days before the event rather than 30.
3. Force Majeure
Critical since 2020. Your force majeure clause must explicitly cover: declared pandemics, government-mandated restrictions on gatherings, mass cancellation of international flights, and natural disasters. The key language addition post-COVID: also cover situations where 40%+ of international attendees cannot travel regardless of the cause. Without this, the hotel keeps your deposit even when the event is physically impossible.
4. F&B Minimum
The hotel guarantees a minimum F&B revenue from your group. If consumption falls short, you pay the difference. Negotiate the minimum at 85–90% of your realistic estimate (not 100%), and ensure all F&B categories count toward the minimum: coffee breaks, lunches, dinners, the bar tab, and minibar charges.
5. Non-Compete
Guarantees the hotel won't host a direct competitor's event during your dates. Essential for product launches, sales kick-offs, or any event where confidentiality is critical. Also prevents the distraction of seeing your direct competitor in the same lobby.
6. Room Block
Hotels often require a room block commitment as part of the event package. If your group uses fewer rooms, you pay for the unused ones. Negotiate a realistic block (60–70% of your estimate) with the option to expand at group rate if attendance exceeds expectations. Avoid committing to 100% of the high-end estimate.
7. AV Exclusivity
Some hotels require you to use their in-house AV provider and charge a "corkage fee" for external suppliers. External AV can save 20–40% compared to hotel rates. Negotiate freedom to use external AV suppliers or cap the corkage fee at a reasonable amount (€500–1,000 maximum).
8. Hotel Walk Policy
What happens if the hotel oversells and cannot accommodate your entire group? Require a clause that obliges the hotel to relocate attendees to an equivalent or superior property at no additional cost, covering the rate difference and transportation. Without this, you have no protection against overbooking.
The Master Bill: Your Post-Event Obligation
Review the master bill line by line before checking out. Hotels commonly add: unauthorized bar charges, AV extras not agreed in the contract, room upgrades you didn't request, and services that were cancelled but not removed from the bill. A 2-hour review of the master bill regularly saves €1,000–5,000 on larger events.
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