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Choice 'magazine' has released an update of the pros and cons of booking airline tickets via 'comparison' web sites such as Webjet, Zuji, Expedia etc. its subscription, so I'll only make elected quotes (It'll probably be in tomorrow's papers if you look around). But the conclusions are interesting, compared to booking direct with the airline.
The article "Comparing Flight prices Online" released today says:
They also discussed of course the fees and penalties which usually go with these third party sites if you make changes.
An Airline Website buying Guide of September 2014 from Choice said:
The article "Comparing Flight prices Online" released today says:
To find out if third-party sites will give you a better deal, we compared the prices of eight flights booked direct through the airline, with those on a range of third-party sites that were popular in search results for cheap flights. We checked prices on Zuji, Wotif, eDreams, BYOjet, Bestjet, Helloworld, STATravel, Last minute, Expedia, Webjet, Flight Centre and travel.com.au.
What we found:
Some sites search more airlines than others, so you may or may not be shown the cheapest airline flying that route, depending on the site you use.
- Flights were often available for less, or at least the same price, directly through the airline, without the hassle of a third party.
- When flights were cheaper through a third party, the price savings were often minimal. However, there were two instances where prices were more than $100 lower.
They also discussed of course the fees and penalties which usually go with these third party sites if you make changes.
Cheap flights turn expensive
Often flights that appear to be cheaper online turn out to be more expensive once booking and payment fees are added. Our spot check found that the popular booking site Webjet was consistently more expensive than booking directly due to booking fees.
An Airline Website buying Guide of September 2014 from Choice said:
Domestic
Flight comparison sites are useful for comparing the five major domestic carriers across your preferred dates, but in most cases you'll be better off using them only to compare, then going directly to the website of the airline with the lowest quoted price. That way, you'll avoid the steep fees that some sites charge.
International
International flights are a different story. With dozens more carriers in play, we found savings of up to 25% – hundreds of dollars – by using the comparison sites not just to compare, but also to book. One flight, for example, quoted a competitive Sydney-London return flight with two carriers – but when we checked those carriers' sites directly, we found they quoted a much higher price or they'd sold out.