Sentinel & Enterprise

Being wary of third-party booking agencies

- By Gita Sitaramiah

Travelers have come to rely on the convenienc­e and savings of bundling packages at online travel agencies like Expedia, Travelocit­y and Priceline.

This year, these third- party websites have been hit by the same wave of airline flight changes and cancellati­ons that are broadly disrupting travel.

Flight deal analyst Gunnar Olson of Thrifty Traveler, a travel education website, said he has observed more challenges for online travel agency customers who are negotiatin­g changes during the pandemic, so he advises travelers to book directly through airlines.

“The problem with booking with these third-party sites is, while they can offer some savings … if anything goes wrong you’re stuck dealing with a middle man,” Olson said.

Sherry Parker of Minneapoli­s used to love booking travel on third-party sites like Expedia and Travelocit­y. This year, after flight changes and cancellati­ons on trips booked on those sites, she’ll use them only for research.

“I hope that more travelers are wary of booking through these third parties right now,” Parker said. “They’re better off to go through the airlines during these turbulent times.”

Parker experience­d a flight cancellati­on earlier this year for an American Airlines flight to Reno in August that she’d booked through Travelocit­y. American started the refund process and she received a refund quickly, she said.

But she haggled with Expedia for months to refund her $795 airfare after each leg of a roundtrip in April for her family of four from Athens to Santorini was changed by carrier Volotea by was five changed hours, including arrival in Athens the night before a 6 a.m. flight home.

First, she tried to change the flights, but that didn’t work. She said Volotea then agreed to the refund because the changes were more than two hours each way. But back she and then forth spent between hours the going airline and Expedia to process the refund.

After a reporter contacted Expedia for this story, Parker, 58, a civil engineer specializi­ng in environmen­tal cleanup, received an email Thursday from Expedia that she would receive a refund.

A spokeswoma­n for Expedia declined to comment on specif-ics We can often resolve the issue but are limited by the policies set by our partners and (are) not authorized to make exceptions on their behalf,” a spokeswoma­n wrote in an email. “If we make a mistake, we are committed to making it right.”

 ?? TNS ?? An American Airlines jet at Dallas-fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport. Travel experts say it’s usually safer to book flights directly through the airlines than through a third-party vendor.
TNS An American Airlines jet at Dallas-fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport. Travel experts say it’s usually safer to book flights directly through the airlines than through a third-party vendor.

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