![]() ![]() Aggregator member savings are more sporadically available, and on the order of just 1% to 2%. Whenever you find a result for a company you’ve never heard of, do a quick search for its name and the words “review” or “scam,” and also check out its reputation on the Better Business Bureau ( BBB.org) before giving them your money.Īs a side note, membership sometimes has its privileges, at least at some OTA sites where signing in can often net you 4% to 6% in savings. Warning: Many aggregators will discover a number of booking sites that have amazingly low prices-but often sketchy track records. You’d think their results would be at least as good-but we found they weren’t. In fact, in our latest survey, the site that found the most hotels was actually an OTA, and not an aggregator that supposedly canvasses it. Why include smaller OTAs at all when there are aggregators that check them? Well, some aggregators aren’t nearly as good as they should be at combing through those booking engines. ![]() We tested both OTAs and the aggregators that search them. There are basically three types of websites we use to find hotels: OTAs (online travel agencies) the hotels’ own websites, which may offer deals OTAs can’t match (and you should always double-check yourself before booking) and aggregators, or meta-search engines, which don’t actually handle reservations-they trawl both OTAs and hotel sites to return a compendium of results, then send you to your choice for booking. ![]() First, it helps to understand the playing field. ![]()
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