Booking.com cancels $4K hotel reservation, offers same rooms again for $17K

2025-11-2414:43127159www.cbc.ca

When an Ontario woman made a $4,300 hotel reservation on Booking.com, she never expected the website would cancel it, then offer her the same accommodations for quadruple the price. A digital rights…

When Erika Mann booked a hotel for the 2026 Formula One Grand Prix in Montreal, she played it safe. 

Her relatives were flying in from the Netherlands to watch the races with her, and Mann, who lives in Oakville, Ont., wanted to make sure their accommodations were locked in. 

On May 25, she booked a four-room unit on Booking.com at Montreal's Holland Hotel, steps from the heart of race-weekend action. Price tag: $4,300. "I was super excited and yeah, jumped right on it," Mann told Go Public. 

But weeks after her reservation was confirmed, her excitement ended. Mann says both the hotel and Booking.com told her the price was a mistake — and if she still wanted the unit for May 22-24, 2026 she'd need to cough up four times the amount — more than $17,000. 

"That was just so outstandingly outrageous that I almost couldn't believe it," she told Go Public.

Digital rights expert David Fewer says shocks like this are becoming more common as online travel sites and hotels rely on automated booking and pricing systems. 

He says Booking.com's policies allow confirmed reservations to be cancelled if the company decides the original rate was an error, leaving consumers exposed — especially when prices surge during big events, a practice known as event pricing. 

"She'd done the research, she'd found the deal … and she'd booked it and thought she was done, and she was not," said Fewer, who directs the Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC) at the University of Ottawa.

"It's a weak position … our consumer protection laws are not great."

'Everything about this felt off'

When Mann booked the accommodations, Formula One organizers hadn't locked in the exact race dates. So she covered her bases — reserving the same four-bedroom unit for two possible weekends in May 2026, both with free cancellation.

Once the official dates were announced, she cancelled the extra booking, in line with Booking.com rules.

Mann says she first heard there was a problem weeks later on June 27, when the hotel called her saying the price was wrong and she needed to cancel or pay the new rate. 

She contacted Booking.com, which gave her two choices: Cancel the reservation herself or pay that new sky-high rate for the same unit on the same dates.

When she refused and demanded to keep her original booking, the website cancelled it.

At this point, Mann says flights were already booked, and accommodation prices in Montreal were rising quickly.

"It felt like they were running out the clock," she said.

Despite her efforts, nothing changed. 

"It felt like Groundhog Day, to be honest,” she said. “Every time it was the same thing. You call in, you're on an immense hold, you talk to someone, you tell the whole story over again.”

A hotel building in Montreal
The Holland Hotel by Simplissimmo is at the heart of Montreal, close to tourist hot spots, and the Formula One Grand Prix events. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Hotel blames pricing glitch

The Holland Hotel where Mann had booked, told Go Public a "synchronization error" with Booking.com caused the issue, allowing non-event pricing to briefly appear for two units at the property. When they did, the hotel says Mann booked one of them.

It said an automated software updates prices through Booking.com's system — which means the hotel can't manually override the rates shown on the platform. 

The hotel says that when Formula One organizers confirmed in 2024 that the 2026 Montreal Grand Prix would take place on the third or fourth weekend of May, the system should have automatically adjusted those dates to “event pricing.”

A formula one car races so fast it blurs crowd
Mercedes driver George Russell, of the United Kingdom, drives during Formula One auto racing action at the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal on June 15. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

Booking.com says the hotel asked them to review the case. The site sided with the property after it reported the posted rate was an error.  

Mann says Booking.com did offer alternative accommodations for roughly what she paid — but none were remotely equivalent and would have meant squeezing her in with her adult step brother, step sister and partner, plus her 24-year-old son and husband.

"One was a single-room studio with two beds," she said. "Another had one bathroom. We're a group of adults, not backpackers."

Fine-print pitfall 

Booking.com's terms note that “Obvious errors and obvious misprints are not binding. For example, if you book a premium car or a night in a luxury suite mistakenly offered for $1, your booking may be cancelled, and we'll refund anything you've paid." 

The hotel told Go Public it was this Booking.com rule that allowed Mann's reservation to be cancelled, and noted that "nothing about this case is unusual."

It says rates are always higher during the Grand Prix, and the increased prices were a "consistent and a well-known market reality" during the event.

A man stands in front of greenery smiling in glasses
Digital law expert David Fewer says booking platforms offer few protections to users and consumer protection laws are lacking. (Naomi Fewer)

Fewer isn't convinced. 

"It's not like they missed the decimal point, right? They gave you the hotel for a buck instead of a thousand bucks. This is something else,” Fewer said. “This is where I think consumers should get the benefit.”

He says the bigger problem is that travellers are often left to fend for themselves, noting that many booking platforms have policies that don’t protect customers, and consumer protection laws haven't caught up. 

"What we need is a consumer protection statute," he said. "Especially for these kinds of things like surge pricing or after-the-fact event pricing … consumers get the benefit of the deal that they found."

Booking.com takes action — after Go Public inquires 

After Go Public contacted Booking.com, the company took another look at Mann's case. 

In a written statement, it said the hotel requested the cancellation.

WATCH | Booking.com is one of the biggest online travel agencies:
An Ontario woman booked a $4,300 hotel for the 2026 Montreal Grand Prix, but Booking.com cancelled it and offered her the same rooms on the same dates for more than $17,000. A digital rights lawyer told CBC Go Public the situation is an example of how automated pricing and weak protections can leave travellers exposed.

"Our procedures do allow for cancellations in limited circumstances where a genuine rate mistake has occurred," Booking.com wrote to Go Public. "That being said, we recognize that communication to the customer fell short of our usual standards."

The company says the cancellation was approved under its standard policy permitting properties to void bookings in "rare cases where a property identifies a clear rate error."

Following Go Public's questions, Booking.com told Mann it would honour her original booking and cover the price difference — allowing her to keep the same four bedroom unit at no additional cost. 

Mann says she's relieved, but says getting help shouldn't require contacting the media.

"You're basically left holding an empty bag and have no power."

How Canadians can protect themselves

Fewer says travellers booking accommodations during major events should take the following steps to protect themselves:

  • Taking screenshots during the booking including numbers and prices.
  • Calling hotels directly to confirm the reservation rate.
  • Using credit cards with strong dispute policies.

"You need to protect yourself the way you would with any contract," he said.

Mann says she did everything right — booked early and documented everything — and still ended up fighting for almost two months to get what she paid for.

"I've used Booking.com for so many other trips and travels, but to me, when this sort of thing happens," she said, "You lose faith.

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Comments

  • By jwr 2025-11-2415:465 reply

    I've been making reservations recently and I think there is a huge imbalance in power.

    All bookings in popular places or on popular dates are NON REFUNDABLE. As in "click and you will never see any of this money again" non-refundable. Very non-refundable. If I have to cancel, I lose all my money.

    At the same time, hotels can cancel for little or no cost. They do not lose money.

    I don't know what the right solution is, but I have a feeling this should be regulated at least a little bit (EU, take notice): I'd say totally non-refundable bookings should not exist. You should always be able to get at least some of your money back before the date the service starts. And if the other side cancels, they should pay a penalty, at least the same as the penalty I have to incur, possibly more to prevent schemes like the one described above.

    • By dec0dedab0de 2025-11-2417:371 reply

      You're not wrong, but if it was a common issue then hotels would start offering those things to differentiate themselves. I know a few currently do that as a way to get you into their loyalty program.

      • By soco 2025-11-2418:09

        As a rule, I always check the hotel's price directly on their site. Often there's quite a difference both in prices and in terms. And you can also call the hotel for some goodies. Sometimes, of course, but totally worth trying. Yes, I have no remorse short-circuiting Booking when they overdo it.

    • By Zigurd 2025-11-2415:563 reply

      We had the beginnings of a solution: The [Edit]CFPB. Oh well. If it makes you feel better we're building the libertarian paradise.

      • By SilverElfin 2025-11-2416:02

        CFTC is something else. But leaving that aside, Bookings is a European company and does lots of business outside of America. So it would take regulations across many countries to stop abuse.

      • By averysmallbird 2025-11-2416:002 reply

        think you mean the FTC.

        • By danans 2025-11-2416:071 reply

          It does make you wonder, given how much investment fraud targets regular people, whether there is considerable overlap between the target surface area of the FTC and what was the CFPB.

          • By averysmallbird 2025-11-2418:03

            CFPB was created in part because of the failure of the FTC during the financial crisis. I’d suspect this specific issue would still be more under the remit of FTC, but no need for pedantry on the overall point. Sad to see enforcement agencies decimated — expect more of this.

        • By Zigurd 2025-11-2416:03

          I meant CFPB. Thank you for alerting me to the error.

      • By mothballed 2025-11-2416:011 reply

        Ah yes, the libertarian paradise where the hotel industry curb-stomps competition through government sponsored regulatory capture by pretending to be "concerned long-term renters and locals" and lobbies for all sorts of licensing and regulation of airbnb and homeowner rentals. They don't want anyone stomping on their fiefdom and forcing them to offer competitive benefits like cancellation.

        • By bigbadfeline 2025-11-2418:36

          You described the later-day libertarian paradise quite well. The core libertarian believes lead exactly there.

    • By j45 2025-11-2417:31

      Since this is a story from Canada, it might be worth learning from the consumer protection laws from Canada and the U.S. in the context of the comments in this thread.

    • By Freedom2 2025-11-2418:31

      > All bookings in popular places or on popular dates are NON REFUNDABLE.

      I'll be sure to let the places I booked in popular places (Nice, Paris, London and just recently Times Square) that had refundable rooms they should be not offering those rooms. After I refund my booking for Times Square, that is.

    • By r0fl 2025-11-2415:491 reply

      This is simply not true. Most hotels have refundable rates if you pay a bit more.

      Show me 3 hotels that have non refundable dates.

      • By LeFantome 2025-11-2417:101 reply

        This is true in general. That said, in some cities at least, the difference in rate is more than a little material.

        • By r0fl 2025-11-2417:50

          False.

          Show me 3 hotels that ONLY have non refundable rooms.

  • By ArcHound 2025-11-2414:575 reply

    Let's take a look at incentives. Booking.com has an incentive to cancel. The hotel itself has an incentive to cancel. The laws in place don't prevent this, especially when some contractual fine print is involved.

    Will this public case result in flood of people away from booking.com? Probably not.

    This is just a simple abuse of power, most easily identified by the question: "What are you going to do about it?"

    It seems the play is to tell the world. Congrats to this lady for getting her money/booking back.

    • By causal 2025-11-2415:233 reply

      Booking.com is also just a terrible service. Their search is one of the better hotel search tools, but I stopped using them after they "lost" a booking but continued to charge me for it anyway. They denied it existed when I finally reached someone on the phone, despite the very real credit card charge. Only after I got my CC company to chargeback did they send me a cancellation notice.

      Incompetence at that level feels like malice.

      • By netsharc 2025-11-2415:292 reply

        Recently they've blocked selecting a hotel's address. I do so to look at the area or public transport options on Google Maps, but I guess too many people look up the hotel website from there and book directly.

        • By a4isms 2025-11-2415:433 reply

          My gawd. You don't need to be a "nerd" to know that almost every modern device these days will happily take a screen shot, read the text in the screen shot, and let you copy or even translate that text.

          • By Garlef 2025-11-2422:12

            You can't (simply) take screenshots inside the booking.com app (at least on android)

          • By netsharc 2025-11-2420:31

            Sheesh, yeah, sure, but that's some extra annoying steps, at least on desktop.

            One could also open the DevTools, Ctrl-F for part of the address, and copy it from the HTML source...

          • By rwmj 2025-11-2416:492 reply

            Their response will be to block screen shots.

            • By netsharc 2025-11-2420:30

              As far as I remember, that happens with the app!

            • By CamperBob2 2025-11-2416:54

              And as long as customers continue to tolerate it, they're not wrong. You get more of what you tolerate.

              Fortunately, you have more power than you think. Just don't do business with these companies. Picking a hotel and calling them directly always works for me.

        • By ponector 2025-11-2419:47

          There is usually no sense to book directly. Many times I checked there is the same offer or worse than booking.

      • By nebula8804 2025-11-2415:57

        On the flipside, sometimes you just cannot deal with hotels directly either. At least not their digital systems. Many of these mom and pop shops run absolutely terrible booking systems.

      • By mschuster91 2025-11-2415:451 reply

        The problem is the alternatives to Bookingdotcom are worse, for both flight and hotels.

        Google and many other services direct you to the hotel itself, which means you need to create an account at the hotel's and enter your cc data... so yeah, tough luck if the hotel's 1990 era website gets hacked. Meanwhile, for Bookingdotcom, I enter my data once, don't have to worry about newsletter spam for the hotels, or my credit card data being exfiltrated. And same for airfare or train rides that can't be booked on Deutsche Bahn.

        • By b3lvedere 2025-11-2415:54

          Hmm, had some fun positive experiences with Kiwi.com. They are also shady as f by constantly combining solo tickets and other stuff, but their app was awesome and pretty useful for checking in and keeping up to date on things.

    • By imdsm 2025-11-2415:27

      I was concerned about this happening to me, as I booked somewhere really early and prices have since gone 5x. Knowing that booking.com will do this means I'll never now use them, and will tell others the same. Thankfully I used another and got the hotel to confirm it.

    • By limagnolia 2025-11-2418:141 reply

      Honestly, it is a difficult case. The consumer is obviously on the higher end of wealth here, booking a premium hotel suite for an expensive event.

      Then, the consumer criticizes those of us that enjoy backpacking as not being "adults". This one really got me.

      The concept that advertised prices that are genuine mistakes are generally not enforceable is a well established concept in many jurisdictions.

      With that being said, I do believe that honoring ones advertised prices, even when they are mistakes, unless it would be egregious or impossible to do so, is generally a better way to do business.

      But will this story prevent me from using a convenient and less expensive platform for booking cheap, bottom barrel hotels, for those of use who aren't "adults"? Probably not.

      • By TheJoeMan 2025-11-2418:25

        It's not a mistake to forget to apply a surcharge in my opinion. The "mistake" was that they underpriced the market, as the booker hedged their bets on the two weekends. A "mistake" would be $1 instead of $1000 which is the example in the TOS.

    • By wslh 2025-11-2415:231 reply

      This is why consumer laws should be really hard and executed very fast, it's the balance to big companies and "perfect" markets.

      • By MichaelZuo 2025-11-2415:272 reply

        Why?

        There are plenty of full service travel agencies that offer to book guaranteed price reservations in pretty much any locale in most countries. There are some that even offer extra guarantees like a last minute cancellation by the hotel being refunded at double the cost, to ensure you can get a room elsewhere.

        • By dpkirchner 2025-11-2416:151 reply

          Can you recommend an agency that offers that double refund option? I haven't been able to find one.

          • By MichaelZuo 2025-11-2418:33

            Amex I believe for most of the popular countries. They also offer all kinds of niche insurance options that are effectively even better, for corporate and high end clients.

        • By wslh 2025-11-2415:291 reply

          > Why?

          Because you live in an attention economy and the probability of using another service is pretty low. We can also develop our own travel agent with LLMs but that's an outlier of the market, and financially negligible. The problem is about power in the economy.

          • By MichaelZuo 2025-11-2415:391 reply

            This doesn’t make sense, how is your preferred range of attention expenditure even relevant?

            If a dozen different HN users expressed a dozen different preferred ranges… would there now have to be viable competitors at each possible step?

            • By Supermancho 2025-11-2415:45

              > This doesn’t make sense, how is your preferred range of attention expenditure even relevant?

              This is an ironic statement, insofar as it's myopic.

              The implication was clearly a monopoly by market availability (convenience), which is not a legal precept, but a sociological one. Comparing rates across all possible locales and vendors is impractical. This is part of what makes Amazon so successful. Sheer momentum.

  • By anonymousiam 2025-11-2416:531 reply

    Not sure if they're still doing it, but American Express once had an "Assured Reservation Program", which I've used. It locks in your reservation and price, and Amex will go to bat for you if a hotel tries to pull a fast one like this.

    I've only leveraged it once, where a (Westin) resort hotel told me my room was not available when I arrived to check in. After I called Amex, The hotel ended up giving me a penthouse suite for the same price.

    "The Assured Reservation Program allows Cardmembers to contact a participating property or rental agency to make an Assured Reservation and guarantee the reservation by giving their American Express Card. The Assured Reservation Program is available to the following industries: hotel, trailer park/campground, vehicle, aircraft, bicycle, boat, equipment, motor home, and motorcycle rentals."

    https://www.americanexpress.com/content/dam/amex/us/merchant...

    • By twoodfin 2025-11-2417:42

      “Solving the Seinfeld Chinese restaurant problem”-aaS!

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