Chapter 5: Registration 
Competencies for Registration 
1. List the seven steps of the registration process, explain the 
function of preregistration, and identify preregistration activities. 
2. Describe the function of registration records and registration 
cards, and identify factors that affect room and rate assignments 
during the registration process. 
3. Outline procedures for establishing the guest’s method of 
payment at registration. 
4. Explain the importance of verifying the guest’s identity, outline 
proper procedures for issuing guestroom keys or access codes to 
guests, and describe the front desk agent’s role in addressing 
special requests from guests during registration. 
5. Discuss creative registration options, describe techniques used to 
upsell guests during registration, and explain how to handle 
situations in which guests cannot be accommodated by the hotel. 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
1
Chapter 5: Registration 
The Registration Process 
• Preregistration activities 
• Creating the registration record 
• Assigning the guestroom and room rate 
• Establishing the guest’s method of payment 
• Verifying the guest’s identity 
• Issuing the room key or access code 
• Responding to special requests 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
2
Chapter 5: Registration 
Preregistration Activities 
• Activities that occur before the guest arrives at the property 
• Help to accelerate the registration process 
• Automated systems reformat data contained in a reservation record 
into a registration record 
• Typically, preregistered guests need only verify information already 
entered onto the registration record and sign a registration form or 
card 
• Preregistration helps managers plan for the special requirements of 
guests 
• Some preregistered guests and groups are checked in at a concierge 
desk or some other area apart from the front desk 
• Some hotels limit preregistration services to VIP guests or groups 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
3
Chapter 5: Registration 
Creating the Registration Record 
• After a guest arrives at the hotel, the front desk agent verifies a 
preregistration record or creates a registration record containing 
important guest information 
• Registration records facilitate the registration process 
• The registration record requires a guest to enter or verify his or 
her name, address, telephone number, e-mail address, company 
affiliation (if appropriate), and other personal data 
• There is usually a space for the guest’s signature on the 
registration record 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
4a 
Continued
Chapter 5: Registration 
Creating the Registration Record Continued from previous slide… 
• Registration records require guests to indicate an intended method 
of payment; if the guest pays or intends to pay with cash, the guest 
will probably have a no-post status in the hotel’s revenue centers 
(that is, cannot charge purchases to a room account) 
• The guest’s departure date should be established or confirmed, as 
well as the room rate 
• At check-out, the information on the registration record may be 
used as the primary source for creating a guest history file 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
4b
Chapter 5: Registration 
Assigning the Guestroom and Room Rate 
• Room assignment involves identifying and allocating an available 
room in a specific room category to a guest 
• On the basis of reservation information, specific rooms and rates 
may be pre-assigned to the guest 
• To best satisfy guest requests, front desk agents must know the 
differences between room types and be capable of querying the 
system to determine each guestroom’s rate, occupancy status, 
furnishings, location, and amenities 
• Typical room status descriptions: occupied, vacant, on-change, 
and out-of-order 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
5a 
Continued
Chapter 5: Registration 
Assigning the Guestroom and Room Rate Continued from previous slide… 
• A room rate is the price a hotel charges for overnight 
accommodations; the standard or non-discounted rate for a room is 
called the “rack rate” 
• Room rates are typically confirmed as part of the reservation 
process 
• Special room rates may include: commercial or corporate, 
complimentary, group, family, day, package-plan, and frequent 
traveler 
• Room rates may include a dining room plan: American Plan, 
Modified American Plan, All Inclusive, or European Plan 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
5b
Chapter 5: Registration 
Establishing the Guest’s Method of Payment 
• Guests may pay via: 
• Cash 
• Personal check 
• Payment card 
• Direct billing 
• Special promotional items (vouchers, gift cards, etc.) 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
6
Chapter 5: Registration 
Paying by Cash 
• Some guests prefer to pay their guestroom charges during 
registration using cash 
• Guests who pay by cash are typically not extended in-house credit; 
they are usually put on a PIA (paid-in-advance) list and are not 
authorized to charge purchases in the hotel’s retail outlets to their 
room accounts 
• In most properties, PIA lists are created automatically by a front office 
system; such systems will not allow outlet employees to post charges 
to guest room accounts 
• Hotels consider cashier’s checks, traveler’s checks, and money orders 
equivalent to cash; hotel staff should require proper guest 
identification when accepting these forms of payment and treat such 
transactions as cash payments 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
7
Chapter 5: Registration 
Paying by Personal Check 
• Some hotels allow guests to pay by using personal checks, 
others do not 
• Some hotels allow guests to cash personal checks as long as 
they have a payment card on file that provides a check-cashing 
guarantee and the check is not for more than the 
guest’s credit limit 
• Some hotels accept personal checks only during standard 
banking hours (allowing for bank verification of the check) 
• Some hotels allow guests to write personal checks only for the 
total amount of the guestroom rate and taxes 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
8a 
Continued
Chapter 5: Registration 
Paying by Personal Check Continued from previous slide… 
• Hotels that accept personal checks should require proper 
identification 
• Hotels should only accept personal checks written on the current 
day (not undated or post-dated) 
• Personal checks should be made payable to the hotel, not to 
“Cash” 
• In general, hotels should not accept second- or third-party checks 
• Some hotels use a check guarantee service or a system capable of 
providing immediate payment of the check via an electronic 
transfer 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
8b
Chapter 5: Registration 
Paying Using a Payment Card 
• Payment cards include credit and debit cards, contact and contactless cards 
• Bank payment cards convey a line of credit and an installment payment plan 
to cardholders; travel and entertainment payment cards are expected to be 
paid in full each month 
• Payment card purchases may be rejected by the issuing entity if the account 
is over the pre-approved limit or if the purchase in question will take the 
account over the limit 
• Debit cards differ from credit cards in that a debit card is attached to a 
checking or savings account; when a charge is incurred on a debit card, the 
amount is immediately deducted from the account (no credit is extended) 
• Debit card purchases can be rejected if there are insufficient funds to cover 
the purchases 
• Front desk agents should always check the expiration date of a payment card 
and refuse to accept an expired card 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
9a 
Continued
Chapter 5: Registration 
Paying Using a Payment Card Continued from previous slide… 
• Once a payment card is swiped or tapped, a card verification service will 
issue either an authorization code or a denial code for the transaction 
• If a card appears to be invalid, the guest should be asked for an 
alternate form of payment 
• Payment card companies may assign a floor limit—the maximum 
amount of charges a hotel can accept without requesting special 
authorization 
• Hotels may reserve a specified amount of pre-authorized credit in a 
guest’s payment card account to ensure payment 
• Front desk agents must be diplomatic when guests have been denied 
credit by their card companies 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
9b
Chapter 5: Registration 
Direct Billing 
• With direct billing, hotels agree to send a bill to the guest or the 
guest’s company after the guest departs the hotel 
• Direct billing arrangements are usually established prior to the 
guest’s arrival 
• The guest (or someone from the guest’s company, if applicable) 
may be asked to complete the hotel’s application for credit; the 
front office manager normally reviews these credit applications 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
10a 
Continued
Chapter 5: Registration 
Direct Billing Continued from previous slide… 
• A list of approved direct billing accounts is usually maintained 
at the front desk 
• At check-out, a guest who has made direct billing 
arrangements simply signs his or her guest folio after 
reviewing its contents, and a statement is mailed 
• In a direct billing arrangement, the hotel assumes 
responsibility for account collection 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
10b
Chapter 5: Registration 
Special Promotions 
• During registration, guests may present vouchers, coupons, 
gift certificates, gift cards, or special incentive awards as 
payment or partial payment 
• Front desk agents must know how to properly handle special 
promotion items 
• Front desk personnel should maintain a set of samples of all 
currently acceptable vouchers, coupons, gift cards, 
certificates, and so on 
• Training sessions should cover special promotion items and 
how to properly handle them 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
11
Chapter 5: Registration 
Payment Issues for Groups 
• Groups differ in the billing arrangements they make for their 
members 
• In some cases, room and tax charges are direct-billed to a group 
master folio or account, with group members responsible for 
their incidental charges (food, beverage, dry cleaning, etc.) 
• In some cases, a group may pay for all of the charges made by 
its members 
• In some cases, a group may pay for all charges only for VIP 
guests or invited speakers 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
12
Chapter 5: Registration 
Verifying the Guest’s Identity 
• Since the terrorist attacks of 9/11, verifying the identity of 
guests has become common practice at nearly all hotels 
• Front desk agents commonly ask for photo identification 
(driver’s license, passport) when completing the registration 
process 
• International guests will typically need to present a passport 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
13
Chapter 5: Registration 
Issuing the Room Key or Access Code 
• The guest registration process is completed when the front desk 
agent issues a room key to the guest 
• For the security of both the guest and the hotel, room keys must 
be carefully controlled 
• Front desk agents should never announce the room number 
when presenting the guestroom key to the guest; room numbers 
can be written down, or the guestroom pointed out on a map of 
the hotel 
• If the hotel provides bell service, the guest can be offered 
assistance from a bell attendant 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
14a 
Continued
Chapter 5: Registration 
Issuing the Room Key or Access Code Continued from previous slide… 
• If a bell attendant assists the guest, the attendant is handed the 
room key and escorts the guest to the guestroom, handling any 
luggage and explaining features of the hotel 
• Once inside the guestroom, the bell attendant can explain the 
features of the room, answer any questions, and give the room key 
to the guest 
• If the guest does not like the room, the attendant can listen 
carefully to the complaint and bring the matter to the attention of 
the front desk agent for corrective action 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
14b
Chapter 5: Registration 
Responding to Special Requests 
• Part of the guest registration process involves acknowledging 
and acting on special guest requests 
• Guestroom special requests include: room type, location, 
view, bed type, smoking/no-smoking status, amenities, special 
furnishings for disabled guests, high-speed Internet access, 
entertainment systems 
• The front office staff should follow up on each request to 
make sure it has been fulfilled 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
15
Chapter 5: Registration 
Creative Registration Options 
• Eliminating the front desk 
• Registering group guests at a special location 
• Creating a unique, separate registration area for VIP guests 
• Combining hotel registration and meeting registration in a 
separate area for arriving group members 
• Registering guests off-site 
• Temporary luggage storage 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
16
Chapter 5: Registration 
Self Registration 
• Self-registration terminals may be located on or off hotel grounds 
• Self-registration may be performed through a mobile device or 
property website 
• Self-registration can significantly reduce guest registration time 
• To use a self-registration option, a guest generally must have made 
a reservation that led to the creation of a reservation record 
• At the time of self-registration, a guest may need to enter a 
reservation confirmation number or swipe/tap a payment card or 
guest-loyalty-program card 
• Self-registration terminals typically connect to a rooms 
management system, enabling automatic room and rate 
assignment; some terminals dispense guestroom keys to guests 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
17
Chapter 5: Registration 
Selling the Guestroom 
• Upselling: the efforts of reservations and front desk agents to 
offer guests the opportunity to reserve rooms in categories 
above standard rate accommodations 
• Staff must be trained to be salespeople, not just order-takers 
• Reservations and front office staff should learn to effectively 
suggest room upgrade options 
• Some hotels offer incentive programs to staff for upselling 
guestrooms 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
18
Chapter 5: Registration 
Denying Accommodations 
• In general, a hotel is obligated to accommodate guests if rooms are 
available; unlawful discrimination is prohibited 
• Walk-in guests: hotels have no obligation to accommodate guests 
without a reservation when no guestrooms are available 
• Guests with non-guaranteed reservations: if guests arrive past the 
hotel’s reservation cancellation hour, a room may not be available, 
because a hotel is not obligated to hold a reservation past that 
point and may have sold the no-longer-reserved room 
• Guests with guaranteed reservations: if reservations are carefully 
handled and sound forecasting procedures are followed, the hotel 
should not have to deny accommodations to these guests; it is a 
serious matter to turn away a guest with a guaranteed reservation 
(some states have laws prohibiting hotels from doing so) 
Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 
19

Chapter 5: Registration

  • 1.
    Chapter 5: Registration Competencies for Registration 1. List the seven steps of the registration process, explain the function of preregistration, and identify preregistration activities. 2. Describe the function of registration records and registration cards, and identify factors that affect room and rate assignments during the registration process. 3. Outline procedures for establishing the guest’s method of payment at registration. 4. Explain the importance of verifying the guest’s identity, outline proper procedures for issuing guestroom keys or access codes to guests, and describe the front desk agent’s role in addressing special requests from guests during registration. 5. Discuss creative registration options, describe techniques used to upsell guests during registration, and explain how to handle situations in which guests cannot be accommodated by the hotel. Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 1
  • 2.
    Chapter 5: Registration The Registration Process • Preregistration activities • Creating the registration record • Assigning the guestroom and room rate • Establishing the guest’s method of payment • Verifying the guest’s identity • Issuing the room key or access code • Responding to special requests Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 2
  • 3.
    Chapter 5: Registration Preregistration Activities • Activities that occur before the guest arrives at the property • Help to accelerate the registration process • Automated systems reformat data contained in a reservation record into a registration record • Typically, preregistered guests need only verify information already entered onto the registration record and sign a registration form or card • Preregistration helps managers plan for the special requirements of guests • Some preregistered guests and groups are checked in at a concierge desk or some other area apart from the front desk • Some hotels limit preregistration services to VIP guests or groups Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 3
  • 4.
    Chapter 5: Registration Creating the Registration Record • After a guest arrives at the hotel, the front desk agent verifies a preregistration record or creates a registration record containing important guest information • Registration records facilitate the registration process • The registration record requires a guest to enter or verify his or her name, address, telephone number, e-mail address, company affiliation (if appropriate), and other personal data • There is usually a space for the guest’s signature on the registration record Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 4a Continued
  • 5.
    Chapter 5: Registration Creating the Registration Record Continued from previous slide… • Registration records require guests to indicate an intended method of payment; if the guest pays or intends to pay with cash, the guest will probably have a no-post status in the hotel’s revenue centers (that is, cannot charge purchases to a room account) • The guest’s departure date should be established or confirmed, as well as the room rate • At check-out, the information on the registration record may be used as the primary source for creating a guest history file Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 4b
  • 6.
    Chapter 5: Registration Assigning the Guestroom and Room Rate • Room assignment involves identifying and allocating an available room in a specific room category to a guest • On the basis of reservation information, specific rooms and rates may be pre-assigned to the guest • To best satisfy guest requests, front desk agents must know the differences between room types and be capable of querying the system to determine each guestroom’s rate, occupancy status, furnishings, location, and amenities • Typical room status descriptions: occupied, vacant, on-change, and out-of-order Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 5a Continued
  • 7.
    Chapter 5: Registration Assigning the Guestroom and Room Rate Continued from previous slide… • A room rate is the price a hotel charges for overnight accommodations; the standard or non-discounted rate for a room is called the “rack rate” • Room rates are typically confirmed as part of the reservation process • Special room rates may include: commercial or corporate, complimentary, group, family, day, package-plan, and frequent traveler • Room rates may include a dining room plan: American Plan, Modified American Plan, All Inclusive, or European Plan Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 5b
  • 8.
    Chapter 5: Registration Establishing the Guest’s Method of Payment • Guests may pay via: • Cash • Personal check • Payment card • Direct billing • Special promotional items (vouchers, gift cards, etc.) Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 6
  • 9.
    Chapter 5: Registration Paying by Cash • Some guests prefer to pay their guestroom charges during registration using cash • Guests who pay by cash are typically not extended in-house credit; they are usually put on a PIA (paid-in-advance) list and are not authorized to charge purchases in the hotel’s retail outlets to their room accounts • In most properties, PIA lists are created automatically by a front office system; such systems will not allow outlet employees to post charges to guest room accounts • Hotels consider cashier’s checks, traveler’s checks, and money orders equivalent to cash; hotel staff should require proper guest identification when accepting these forms of payment and treat such transactions as cash payments Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 7
  • 10.
    Chapter 5: Registration Paying by Personal Check • Some hotels allow guests to pay by using personal checks, others do not • Some hotels allow guests to cash personal checks as long as they have a payment card on file that provides a check-cashing guarantee and the check is not for more than the guest’s credit limit • Some hotels accept personal checks only during standard banking hours (allowing for bank verification of the check) • Some hotels allow guests to write personal checks only for the total amount of the guestroom rate and taxes Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 8a Continued
  • 11.
    Chapter 5: Registration Paying by Personal Check Continued from previous slide… • Hotels that accept personal checks should require proper identification • Hotels should only accept personal checks written on the current day (not undated or post-dated) • Personal checks should be made payable to the hotel, not to “Cash” • In general, hotels should not accept second- or third-party checks • Some hotels use a check guarantee service or a system capable of providing immediate payment of the check via an electronic transfer Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 8b
  • 12.
    Chapter 5: Registration Paying Using a Payment Card • Payment cards include credit and debit cards, contact and contactless cards • Bank payment cards convey a line of credit and an installment payment plan to cardholders; travel and entertainment payment cards are expected to be paid in full each month • Payment card purchases may be rejected by the issuing entity if the account is over the pre-approved limit or if the purchase in question will take the account over the limit • Debit cards differ from credit cards in that a debit card is attached to a checking or savings account; when a charge is incurred on a debit card, the amount is immediately deducted from the account (no credit is extended) • Debit card purchases can be rejected if there are insufficient funds to cover the purchases • Front desk agents should always check the expiration date of a payment card and refuse to accept an expired card Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 9a Continued
  • 13.
    Chapter 5: Registration Paying Using a Payment Card Continued from previous slide… • Once a payment card is swiped or tapped, a card verification service will issue either an authorization code or a denial code for the transaction • If a card appears to be invalid, the guest should be asked for an alternate form of payment • Payment card companies may assign a floor limit—the maximum amount of charges a hotel can accept without requesting special authorization • Hotels may reserve a specified amount of pre-authorized credit in a guest’s payment card account to ensure payment • Front desk agents must be diplomatic when guests have been denied credit by their card companies Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 9b
  • 14.
    Chapter 5: Registration Direct Billing • With direct billing, hotels agree to send a bill to the guest or the guest’s company after the guest departs the hotel • Direct billing arrangements are usually established prior to the guest’s arrival • The guest (or someone from the guest’s company, if applicable) may be asked to complete the hotel’s application for credit; the front office manager normally reviews these credit applications Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 10a Continued
  • 15.
    Chapter 5: Registration Direct Billing Continued from previous slide… • A list of approved direct billing accounts is usually maintained at the front desk • At check-out, a guest who has made direct billing arrangements simply signs his or her guest folio after reviewing its contents, and a statement is mailed • In a direct billing arrangement, the hotel assumes responsibility for account collection Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 10b
  • 16.
    Chapter 5: Registration Special Promotions • During registration, guests may present vouchers, coupons, gift certificates, gift cards, or special incentive awards as payment or partial payment • Front desk agents must know how to properly handle special promotion items • Front desk personnel should maintain a set of samples of all currently acceptable vouchers, coupons, gift cards, certificates, and so on • Training sessions should cover special promotion items and how to properly handle them Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 11
  • 17.
    Chapter 5: Registration Payment Issues for Groups • Groups differ in the billing arrangements they make for their members • In some cases, room and tax charges are direct-billed to a group master folio or account, with group members responsible for their incidental charges (food, beverage, dry cleaning, etc.) • In some cases, a group may pay for all of the charges made by its members • In some cases, a group may pay for all charges only for VIP guests or invited speakers Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 12
  • 18.
    Chapter 5: Registration Verifying the Guest’s Identity • Since the terrorist attacks of 9/11, verifying the identity of guests has become common practice at nearly all hotels • Front desk agents commonly ask for photo identification (driver’s license, passport) when completing the registration process • International guests will typically need to present a passport Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 13
  • 19.
    Chapter 5: Registration Issuing the Room Key or Access Code • The guest registration process is completed when the front desk agent issues a room key to the guest • For the security of both the guest and the hotel, room keys must be carefully controlled • Front desk agents should never announce the room number when presenting the guestroom key to the guest; room numbers can be written down, or the guestroom pointed out on a map of the hotel • If the hotel provides bell service, the guest can be offered assistance from a bell attendant Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 14a Continued
  • 20.
    Chapter 5: Registration Issuing the Room Key or Access Code Continued from previous slide… • If a bell attendant assists the guest, the attendant is handed the room key and escorts the guest to the guestroom, handling any luggage and explaining features of the hotel • Once inside the guestroom, the bell attendant can explain the features of the room, answer any questions, and give the room key to the guest • If the guest does not like the room, the attendant can listen carefully to the complaint and bring the matter to the attention of the front desk agent for corrective action Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 14b
  • 21.
    Chapter 5: Registration Responding to Special Requests • Part of the guest registration process involves acknowledging and acting on special guest requests • Guestroom special requests include: room type, location, view, bed type, smoking/no-smoking status, amenities, special furnishings for disabled guests, high-speed Internet access, entertainment systems • The front office staff should follow up on each request to make sure it has been fulfilled Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 15
  • 22.
    Chapter 5: Registration Creative Registration Options • Eliminating the front desk • Registering group guests at a special location • Creating a unique, separate registration area for VIP guests • Combining hotel registration and meeting registration in a separate area for arriving group members • Registering guests off-site • Temporary luggage storage Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 16
  • 23.
    Chapter 5: Registration Self Registration • Self-registration terminals may be located on or off hotel grounds • Self-registration may be performed through a mobile device or property website • Self-registration can significantly reduce guest registration time • To use a self-registration option, a guest generally must have made a reservation that led to the creation of a reservation record • At the time of self-registration, a guest may need to enter a reservation confirmation number or swipe/tap a payment card or guest-loyalty-program card • Self-registration terminals typically connect to a rooms management system, enabling automatic room and rate assignment; some terminals dispense guestroom keys to guests Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 17
  • 24.
    Chapter 5: Registration Selling the Guestroom • Upselling: the efforts of reservations and front desk agents to offer guests the opportunity to reserve rooms in categories above standard rate accommodations • Staff must be trained to be salespeople, not just order-takers • Reservations and front office staff should learn to effectively suggest room upgrade options • Some hotels offer incentive programs to staff for upselling guestrooms Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 18
  • 25.
    Chapter 5: Registration Denying Accommodations • In general, a hotel is obligated to accommodate guests if rooms are available; unlawful discrimination is prohibited • Walk-in guests: hotels have no obligation to accommodate guests without a reservation when no guestrooms are available • Guests with non-guaranteed reservations: if guests arrive past the hotel’s reservation cancellation hour, a room may not be available, because a hotel is not obligated to hold a reservation past that point and may have sold the no-longer-reserved room • Guests with guaranteed reservations: if reservations are carefully handled and sound forecasting procedures are followed, the hotel should not have to deny accommodations to these guests; it is a serious matter to turn away a guest with a guaranteed reservation (some states have laws prohibiting hotels from doing so) Managing Front Office Operations PowerPoint 19