Rate Parity: The Legal Reason Hotels Cannot Give You a Better Deal Direct
A rate parity clause is a contract term OTAs place in every supplier agreement requiring the hotel to never publicly advertise a lower rate on any other channel, including its own website. There are two flavors: wide parity (no channel anywhere can be cheaper) and narrow parity (the hotel cannot undercut on its own website or on competing OTAs).
Why this exists
OTAs spend billions on paid search and brand awareness. Their argument is simple: "If we drive you a customer, you cannot use us as a storefront and then undercut us with a cheaper rate direct." From the OTA's side this is rational. From the traveler's side it means the competitive pricing force you expect from the free market is quietly suppressed.
Where parity is banned
Wide parity is illegal in the EU, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Austria, Belgium, and Switzerland. The German Federal Court of Justice struck it down in 2021. Yet hotels still behave as if it exists, because (a) narrow parity is still allowed in many jurisdictions, and (b) OTAs retaliate by demoting non-compliant hotels in search rankings — an outcome nearly as damaging as the contractual penalty itself.
What this means for you
The reason the hotel website never beats Booking.com is not that the hotel does not want to — it is that doing so visibly invites ranking penalties. This is why "book direct" as advice is often misleading: the hotel's public rate is required to match, even when parity is no longer legally enforceable.
Where lower prices legally live
Parity covers public rates. It does not cover closed-user groups, mobile-app-only rates, corporate negotiated rates, bedbank B2B feeds, or package (flight+hotel) rates. Every real deal hides in one of those five channels. Vacayos surfaces rates from channels that parity clauses cannot legally touch.
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