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How to spot and protect yourself from travel scams

Scammers are a lot of things: Cruel, insidious and greedy. One thing they are not? Dumb.

Scammers keep getting more creative, and consumers like us must constantly update our knowledge on how to avoid these scams — especially when it comes to travel!

One relatively new scam involves scammers selling you what you think is a legit ticket, which later turns out to be only a reservation. 

A new travel scam to watch for

Here’s how it works: You search for airline tickets online or reply to a scam email. Overwhelmed by all the sites and apps (find the 10 best ones here!), you choose what seems like a trustworthy source and contact them.

They promise they can get you a great rate on a ticket and take down all your particulars: Name, phone number and more. Then you pay for the ticket. (Payment may also be asked for at a later date.)

Using your information, they book what you think is a confirmed seat and claim that you’re all set.

Thinking you’re doing due diligence, you visit the airline’s main site, enter your information and boom — there’s your reserved seat. You pat yourself on the back for saving money and consider your travel booked.

Two weeks later, the reserved hold runs out and your seat evaporates. You find this out and try to get help from the airline. Usually, they can do nothing for you since only a reservation was actually booked. 

Hopefully, you find this out long before standing at an airport customer service counter, suitcase in hand! Either way, you don’t have an airline ticket and have been scammed out of the money.

Side note: With all the planning, thinking and hours of work they must put into their elaborate scams, you wonder why they just refuse to get a real job. Scamming is a cruel, lazy way to make a living.

Outsmarting the thieves

The good news is that you can avoid these scams with forethought and education. For example, to prevent this reservation scam, you can do things like:

How to spot fake travel sites

Crooks are great at creating fake apps and sites to rip you off. Fortunately, there are signs to watch for that can help to avoid them.

Getting personal

We’re so wary of online scammers that sometimes we forget to protect ourselves from the live person scammer. The ones that overcharge you for taxi rides are just one example. 

Other common in-person scams include:

But don’t let any of these scams prevent you from traveling. It’s a big, beautiful world out there! You just need to travel it with your eyes open. So keep educating yourself and read on about other common flight scams.