Key Takeaway
Booking.com has faced criticism for its pricing clauses, which were intended to prevent ‘free-rider’ bookings where customers find hotels on the platform but book directly to avoid fees. These restrictions enforced price parity across all channels, limiting hotels’ ability to compete on price and protecting Booking.com’s commission structure. Travel Tech Consultant Adeeb Jano argues that while Booking.com’s technology is exceptional, the business model uses this technology to exert control, raising concerns about whether growth transitions from being supportive to suppressive, potentially fracturing the ecosystem.
Did Booking.com implement an anti-competitive strategy?
Booking.com defended its pricing clauses as essential to prevent ‘free-rider’ bookings, where customers would find hotels through the platform but then book directly with the property to avoid commission fees.
These restrictions effectively compelled hotels to maintain price parity across all channels, including their own direct booking systems.
This practice safeguarded Booking.com’s commission structure while limiting hotels’ ability to compete on price through their own channels.
“This isn’t a failure of technology,” notes Adeeb Jano, Travel Tech Consultant at DCS+.
“Booking.com’s technology is undeniably robust; its seamless booking flow, intelligent pricing algorithms, and user experience design set the gold standard in travel. It became the platform everyone aspired to join.
“However, the concern lies not in how the technology functions, but in how the business model utilizes that technology to exert control. When growth turns into leverage, and leverage transforms into limitation, the ecosystem begins to fracture.
“At what point does scale shift from being supportive to becoming suppressive?”



