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Before you go: Hotel trade group warns of scammers

Hotel trade group warns of scammers

Hotel booking scams are on the rise partly because 1 in 3 vacations is set up online, with many hotel and airline reservations punched in on those tiny, hard-to-read smartphone screens.

Now a hotel trade group is asking Congress and the U.S. attorney general’s office to take action on the problem, which may be bilking 2.5 million travelers each year.

“If you book the room online, you may not find out there is a problem until you show up at the front desk,” said Maryam Cope of the American Hotel and Lodging Association.

In the most common scam, travelers will book on an online site that resembles a legitimate booking site, only to find out later that the site was bogus, Cope said. Bogus sites might resemble legitimate hotel sites, even adopting the logos and emblems of major hotel chains, she said. It may be hard to tell the difference on a tiny smartphone screen.

In some cases the bogus website will take a commission but will fail to include special requests, such as a room with an extra cot or disabled guest access. In other cases the bogus website will simply take a guest’s deposit and make no reservation at all.

Cope estimates that the scams are costing U.S. travelers more than $220 million a year.

On behalf of the hotel trade group, five members of Congress have written to the U.S. attorney general’s office, asking the Justice Department to spread the word about the scams.

Thin-cushion seats help boost profits

Several of the nation’s largest airlines have reported record profits for the first three months of the year, thanks in part to lower fuel costs, steady travel demand and the growing use of thin-cushion seats that allow carriers to squeeze more passengers into each plane.

Although airlines have said the new seats are just as comfortable as the old, travelers disagree.

In a survey released last week of 2,700 members of the travel website TripAdvisor, 65 percent of fliers who have tried the thin-cushion seats say they are less comfortable than other seats.

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Hugo Martin, Los Angeles Times

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