Booking.com vs Expedia Cancellation Policies Compared
Both OTAs let the property set the cancellation terms — but their default behaviour, escalation latitude and refund timelines differ in ways the marketing copy never explains. Here's the actual matrix.
Default Cancellation Window
Booking.com defaults to 24-48 hours before check-in for free-cancellation rates, but the actual window depends on each individual property's policy. Many city-centre Booking properties offer free cancellation until the same day of check-in; many seasonal / resort properties cut off 7-14 days out.
Expedia tends to standardise more — its default 'free cancellation' badge usually means 24-72 hours before check-in. Properties that offer same-day free cancellation are flagged separately. Expedia is slightly stricter on average but more predictable.
Both platforms let the property offer multiple rates side-by-side: a higher refundable rate and a lower non-refundable rate for the same room. Booking shows them more transparently in the rate selector; Expedia tends to default-promote the lower non-refundable rate, requiring more clicks to find the refundable option.
Refund Processing Time
Booking.com: refunds initiated within 24-48 hours of cancellation, hit your card 5-10 business days later. Total: 7-14 days from cancellation to money in account, on average.
Expedia: refund processing tends to be faster on the OTA side (24 hours) but the credit-back to your card is reported by users to be slower in practice — 10-21 business days to settle, sometimes longer for international cards.
Hotels.com (Expedia-owned, shared back-end): same as Expedia, sometimes slower if the booking was paid via PayPal or a non-card method. Allow 21-28 days for those.
If the refund hasn't appeared in your account within 30 days of cancellation, escalate. Both OTAs have 'where's my refund' escalation channels. Cite the cancellation confirmation number and the original payment record.
The Difference That Actually Matters
**Booking.com is more flexible on direct contact between guest and property.** Property contact details show on the booking confirmation; messaging the property is straightforward through the Booking app. The property can offer one-off accommodations more easily.
**Expedia is more standardised on policy enforcement.** Less variance between properties on whether 'non-refundable' actually means non-refundable. Easier to predict; harder to negotiate around.
**Booking.com Genius gives more recurring-traveler value.** Free upgrades, late check-out, occasional refundability flex.
**Expedia Rewards / Hotels.com Rewards translate into faster goodwill-credit approvals.** Less qualitative flex, more 'here's a 10% credit on your next booking' type fixes.
Search 'can I transfer my hotel booking' and you'll get a wall of results that all say 'it depends, contact the OTA' — useless. The reality is far more interesting: the answer varies by carrier (here: by chain, by booking channel, by season). There's a real matrix here that nobody publishes well; we try to publish it well.
If You Can't Cancel — Recover Via Resale
If you've exhausted the OTA escalation paths and the property refuses to release the booking, your remaining recovery option is P2P resale. Most hotel bookings are guest-name-transferable; you can sell the booking to someone who CAN use it.
List on SpareHolidays — free to list, you set the price, we take 10% from the buyer. Buyer pays into Stripe escrow; you transfer the booking to them (typically by phoning the property and updating the guest name); buyer confirms; escrow releases. If the transfer fails for any reason, the buyer gets a full refund and you keep the original booking.
Realistic recovery rates: 50-80% of original cost depending on how popular the property and how close to check-in. List as soon as you decide; recovery rates drop fast as check-in approaches.
Step-by-Step Guide
Read the specific property's cancellation terms
Both OTAs let the property set policy. A 'flexible' Booking property may be more refundable than a strict Expedia property — check the actual booking, not the OTA brand.
If denied, phone the property directly
Use the number on their official site. Both OTAs hide property phone numbers; the property itself can often release you from a non-refundable booking when contacted directly.
Escalate to a human at the OTA — not the chatbot
Both OTAs have human escalation paths. Local-language support lines and tier-based reps have more goodwill discretion than first-line chat.
Ask for a goodwill credit if a cash refund is denied
Both OTAs issue goodwill credits in lieu of refunds — same value, future-booking only, 12-month expiry typical.
If all OTA paths fail, list on a P2P marketplace
Hotel guest names are usually transferable. P2P resale recovers 50-80% of original cost when you list early enough.
Frequently Asked Questions
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SpareHolidays makes it easy to sell your unused travel or find a discounted deal — with escrow protection on every transaction.