BOOK / CHANGES & CANCELLATIONS / 07
OTA vs. Direct: Who Owns the Booking
OTA vs direct booking guide for changes and cancellations: merchant of record, airline support, hotel support, refund authority, credits, vouchers, and when third-party savings are worth it.
Claim check
OTA vs. Direct: Who Owns the Booking is a practical guide for travelers trying to keep control of money after an itinerary changes. The safest move is to separate what the supplier owes, what the policy says, and what the traveler already accepted. This page keeps the decision plain: identify the product, read the exact term, preserve the written record, and choose the next move before a voucher, credit, or rebooking closes the better option.
Identify merchant of record
The name on your card statement often tells you who must process a refund. This step matters because refund and change decisions usually fail when a traveler treats every cancellation as the same problem. The correct answer depends on who changed the trip, who charged the card, which rule applies, and whether the traveler accepted an alternative.
Separate supplier from seller
The airline or hotel may operate the service, while the OTA owns the transaction. This step matters because refund and change decisions usually fail when a traveler treats every cancellation as the same problem. The correct answer depends on who changed the trip, who charged the card, which rule applies, and whether the traveler accepted an alternative.
Add contact info direct
Even if you book through an OTA, give the airline your email and phone inside the reservation. This step matters because refund and change decisions usually fail when a traveler treats every cancellation as the same problem. The correct answer depends on who changed the trip, who charged the card, which rule applies, and whether the traveler accepted an alternative.
Use direct for high-risk trips
Complex routes, tight connections, weather seasons, and visa uncertainty favor direct booking. This step matters because refund and change decisions usually fail when a traveler treats every cancellation as the same problem. The correct answer depends on who changed the trip, who charged the card, which rule applies, and whether the traveler accepted an alternative.
Keep both paper trails
Save OTA chat, airline notices, hotel messages, and receipts. This step matters because refund and change decisions usually fail when a traveler treats every cancellation as the same problem. The correct answer depends on who changed the trip, who charged the card, which rule applies, and whether the traveler accepted an alternative.
Common cases
Simple hotel night — Maybe
An OTA discount may be fine when risk and value are low. The practical test is whether this case gives the traveler leverage, creates a deadline, or simply confirms that the original purchase was restrictive. Use the label as a quick triage signal, then check the source document before acting.
Complex flight — Direct
Book direct so the airline can reissue quickly. The practical test is whether this case gives the traveler leverage, creates a deadline, or simply confirms that the original purchase was restrictive. Use the label as a quick triage signal, then check the source document before acting.
Package deal — Caution
Support can become fragmented. The practical test is whether this case gives the traveler leverage, creates a deadline, or simply confirms that the original purchase was restrictive. Use the label as a quick triage signal, then check the source document before acting.
Refund owed — Trace
Merchant of record can determine who processes it. The practical test is whether this case gives the traveler leverage, creates a deadline, or simply confirms that the original purchase was restrictive. Use the label as a quick triage signal, then check the source document before acting.
Schedule change — Watch
Airline notice matters even if OTA sold the ticket. The practical test is whether this case gives the traveler leverage, creates a deadline, or simply confirms that the original purchase was restrictive. Use the label as a quick triage signal, then check the source document before acting.
Price difference tiny — Direct
Choose direct for control. The practical test is whether this case gives the traveler leverage, creates a deadline, or simply confirms that the original purchase was restrictive. Use the label as a quick triage signal, then check the source document before acting.
Specific how-to guides
- Hotel Cancellation Windows and Deadlines: Hotel cancellation window guide: refundable vs nonrefundable rates, deposit timing, local hotel deadlines, OTA bookings, resort rules, taxes, and when to pay for flexibility.
- Refund vs. Voucher vs. Credit: Refund vs voucher guide: when cash is owed, when credits are acceptable, expiration dates, restrictions, automatic refunds, airline offers, and how to decide.
- Credit Card Dispute: The Chargeback: Credit card dispute guide for travel refunds: chargeback timing, documentation, merchant of record, airline refund refusal, hotel no-show disputes, and when not to file.
- Airline Change Fees by Ticket Class: Airline change fee guide by ticket class: basic economy, main cabin, award tickets, same-day changes, fare differences, waivers, and when to cancel instead.
- Avoid OTA Risks When Booking Flights: Use this when a cheap third-party fare creates a support problem.
- Vacation Rental Cancellation Policies: Useful when the stay, not the flight, is where the money is trapped.
Source stack
- DOT refunds: Ticket agents that are merchants of record can be responsible for proper refunds on covered airfare.
- Booking receipt: The card statement and confirmation identify the support path.
- Supplier account: Add contact details directly when possible.
Decision table
DOT refunds
Ticket agents that are merchants of record can be responsible for proper refunds on covered airfare. Keep this source in the file with the confirmation email, airline notice, hotel policy, insurance certificate, or card statement so the claim does not depend on memory.
Booking receipt
The card statement and confirmation identify the support path. Keep this source in the file with the confirmation email, airline notice, hotel policy, insurance certificate, or card statement so the claim does not depend on memory.
Supplier account
Add contact details directly when possible. Keep this source in the file with the confirmation email, airline notice, hotel policy, insurance certificate, or card statement so the claim does not depend on memory.
FAQ
Who owns the booking?
Start with the merchant of record and confirmation. The seller and operator can be different.
Is direct always cheaper?
No. Direct is often better for support, not always for price.
Can an OTA refund airline fees?
It depends on what it sold and whether it is merchant of record.
Should I call the airline or OTA?
If the OTA sold the ticket, start there, but also monitor airline notices directly.
When is an OTA worth it?
Low-stakes stays or tickets where the savings are large and the plan is stable.