AT A GLANCE:
Anyone who booked a stay through Expedia, Hotels.com, Orbitz, Travelocity, Vrbo, or Hotwire between April 2023 and April 2025, and saw the final total jump with added fees.
These travel sites are accused of showing low nightly rates upfront, then quietly adding mandatory fees later in the booking process.
If you were misled by hidden charges, you may be owed refunds or compensation for the extra costs you didn’t agree to upfront.
Expedia and its travel brands are under fire for “drip pricing”—advertising cheap nightly rates, but only revealing the real total after adding fees for things like “resort access,” “destination charges,” or “cleaning.”
Consumers say these practices made prices look cheaper than they actually were, and that companies should show the full price from the start, just like other businesses are now being required to do.
People who booked between April 12, 2023 and April 12, 2025 may be eligible to file a claim to recover part of those hidden fees.
If you qualify, you can bring a claim through arbitration—a legal process similar to court but often faster and more streamlined. Our legal partners will handle the process on your behalf.
Correct. These are individual arbitration claims, not a class action or traditional lawsuit. It’s a common way to hold companies accountable when they’ve violated privacy or consumer protection laws.
There are no upfront costs to you. Legal fees are only collected if your case is won or settled.
We work with a number of established and respected law firms across the United States, all of whom work to secure compensation for people like you who may have had their privacy rights violated. This campaign is sponsored by Bryson Harris Suciu & DeMay PLLC.
This is a legal advertisement sponsored by Bryson Harris Suciu & DeMay PLLC.
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