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by greggman 3527 days ago
Booking.com has started taking Airbnb like listings for which there was no indication on booking.com that I noticed.

I recently booked a room in stockholm that looked nice on booking.com. It was only after I booked that I was contacted by the owner and told how to meet up and get the key etc . I was pretty upset it wasn't an actual hotel but it was arguably too late to change things. It turned out to just be someone's apartment.

I have no idea if booking.com knew that. I do know I would not have booked if I had know for this particular trip.

4 comments

Ah right, I had one bad experience. If on booking.com, I expect an apartment to be an apartment building (meaning: loads of apartments and a reception). It seems difficult to see the difference on booking.com. I booked an apartment where it was really like an Airbnb. Meaning: call this local number. Fortunately they had whatsapp as well. This in Europe, were finally I can call to my own country from elsewhere in Europe, but calling to the local country is still crazy expensive (special rate for mobile phones -- which small companies often use).

Unlike Airbnb the apartment did want me to pay the tourist tax. Strangely, I paid a bit less than what booking.com said I should've. I mentioned it but the guy ignored it (oh well).

Usually I do check around (see if I can find a cheaper rate by booking directly).

I don't think it was booking.com, but I had something similar happen to me in Japan. My wife picked out a nice-looking hotel on one of those aggregate sites, and I went to one of the sites that had the listing for it. I even double-checked the address to be sure.

After booking, my wife noted that the email they sent referenced an apartment instead of the hotel. Sure enough, it was different... It was across the street!

I got instructions to go to the other side of Akihabara, up a few floors, and get a key from some office there.

In the end, we chose to pay for the first day of the "hotel room" and cancel the booking, going to a real hotel instead.

I think it's pretty clearly specified which ones are apartments. I travel very frequently and have had various bad experiences with AirBnB. Nowadays I almost always book an apartment via booking.com. It's nice to have an actual customer service who takes care of issues, not always having to pay absurd cancellation fees, not having to wait for approval, and hosts not cancelling at the last moment.
Similar observation.

I was on a recent trip to Poland.

Accommodations for one city was on Airbnn(zealously over-finished apartment but nice), one city was on booking.com.

Turns out booking.com accommodations were just an unsold apartment in a half sold building being used as a half hotel in the middle of an unfinished development.

It was a hotel like experience (hotel tax included) but I would have been upset to actually buy an apartment in this building.