logo
Some Sneaky Fees Can No Longer Hide. But Watch Out for Others.

Some Sneaky Fees Can No Longer Hide. But Watch Out for Others.

New York Times25-05-2025

Everyone who has shopped online for hotel rooms, vacation rentals or plane tickets has had the experience of finding a reasonable upfront price that then skyrockets at checkout because of undisclosed fees.
Common culprits include the dreaded resort fee, vacation rental cleaning fees and, on some airlines, the cost of choosing seats. Such annoying costs that creep in at the end of the transaction are widely known as junk fees, which complicate the process of making apples-to-apples price comparisons.
A Federal Trade Commission rule went into effect this month preventing hotels, vacation rentals and ticketing services for live entertainment events from obfuscating extra costs. Those types of businesses are now required to show an upfront price that includes all fees, and they are not allowed to tack on any at the end.
This win for consumers will radically change the way we make bookings online for travel and entertainment. The F.T.C. estimates that Americans waste 53 million hours a year comparing prices on live-event tickets and short-term lodging. Now, we can do a quick web search to get a price comparison across multiple vendors and pick the option that suits our budget.
But — and I'm sorry to be a buzzkill — this is where the good news ends.
Hidden fees still lurk in other areas, like airfares, car rental reservations and movie tickets. In other words, the experience of online booking has improved for some categories but not all.
'People really feel nickel-and-dimed to death,' said Chuck Bell, a director at Consumer Reports, who has lobbied against junk fees for years.
Here's what to know.
Deal Hunting for Hotels and Event Tickets Is Much Easier
Because of the new F.T.C. rule, sites that aggregate booking information for hotels, like Hotels.com and Expedia, are now showing total room rates including taxes and all fees.
On Hotels.com, for example, the site quoted $825 for a two-night stay at a hotel in Midtown Manhattan. After I clicked through, the checkout page showed the breakdown, which included a $60 resort fee and taxes.
Similarly, when I'm browsing vacation homes on Airbnb, the total price appears, including the service fee that users pay to the site as well as the cleaning fee charged by a host. Sites selling tickets for live events, including Ticketmaster and StubHub, now show a total cost including their service fees.
While the fees themselves have not gone away, the true costs are now transparent. That makes it easier to stick to a budget when shopping around.
Brian Kelly, founder of The Points Guy, a blog that follows travel deals, advises that travelers use third-party hotel aggregators like Expedia to compare prices, then book directly with the hotel. If something goes wrong with your hotel reservation, the issue can be resolved more efficiently by the hotel's support staff than by the aggregator, which is essentially a middleman, he added.
The F.T.C. said in a statement that it focused on two industries that had a history of deceptive pricing practices.
'Consumers were frustrated with shopping for event tickets or hotel stays, only to be hit with expensive and mysterious fees when they go to pay,' according to the agency's statement. 'Consumers now will have the whole truth.'
But Hidden Fees Remain Elsewhere
Online bookings get more complicated for other categories, like plane tickets.
A search on Alaska Airlines' website showed a flight from New York to San Francisco in June for $320. Only after I clicked through did it become clear that selecting my own seat would cost an extra $200, bringing the total to $520.
Airlines were not included in the F.T.C.'s junk fees rule because they are under the jurisdiction of the Department of Transportation, but that agency has been making similar pushes for greater price transparency. Last month, the department announced a rule requiring airlines to display upfront any fees for checked bags and seat selections. The airlines sued the department this month, arguing that the rule would confuse consumers by giving them too much information. As a result, the rule has not yet gone into effect.
'This is an industry that lives on sticker shock,' said William McGee, an aviation expert at the American Economic Liberties Project, a nonprofit that fights corporate monopolies. 'The gotchas just never stop.'
He added that consumers would have to continue working diligently to understand the true price of a plane ticket.
One useful technique to streamline the research process is to become familiar with the types of fees a business typically adds at checkout. Budget airlines, for example, typically charge for extras. If you're using an airfare comparison tool like Google Flights, you can filter out budget airlines from your search and look for tickets only from brands with simpler pricing structures.
Junk fees are still hiding in lots of our online transactions. The total cost of a movie ticket, including the so-called convenience fee for booking online, is often not shown until after you've picked a showtime and seat. Some rental car companies add a charge for operating at an airport, among other fees.
Long story short, stay on guard.
Long Term, Transparency May Force Prices Down
Even though the new rules sound like small wins, consumers may have bigger changes to look forward to, Mr. Bell said. Now that hotels and live event services have to be clearer about their pricing, they may face competitive pressure to lower their fees.
'It'll be nice to see some of the fees reduced or eliminated,' he added.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Introducing Bounce, a tool to move your following between Bluesky and Mastodon
Introducing Bounce, a tool to move your following between Bluesky and Mastodon

TechCrunch

time30 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Introducing Bounce, a tool to move your following between Bluesky and Mastodon

A major development showcasing the potential for the open social web was unveiled Thursday at the online conference known as FediForum. From the makers of Bridgy Fed, a tool that connects decentralized open social networks, like Mastodon and Bluesky, there now comes a new project known as Bounce that will allow users to migrate their social network followers across networks powered by different protocols. This is a significant step towards making the open social web a more viable alternative to the locked-in ecosystems provided by tech giants like Meta, Snap, Google, TikTok, and X — and where you may be able to delete your account and export your data when you leave, but not actually migrate your account to a new app. Today, Mastodon, Bluesky, and other social services that run on their protocols (ActivityPub and the AT Protocol, respectively) allow users to move their accounts within their protocol network. That means a Mastodon user can migrate their account to another Mastodon server, while Bluesky allows users to move their accounts and data from one Personal Data Server (PDS) to another. (The latter is still a work in progress because you can move off of Bluesky's PDS but not back to it!) However, it hasn't been possible for users to move their accounts or retain their followings by moving from one network to another. Now led by a nonprofit called A New Social, the makers of Bridgy Fed have developed technology that will make this type of migration possible. Techcrunch event Save now through June 4 for TechCrunch Sessions: AI Save $300 on your ticket to TC Sessions: AI—and get 50% off a second. Hear from leaders at OpenAI, Anthropic, Khosla Ventures, and more during a full day of expert insights, hands-on workshops, and high-impact networking. These low-rate deals disappear when the doors open on June 5. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you've built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | REGISTER NOW Image Credits:Bridgy Fed diagram (A New Social) The tech builds on Bridgy Fed to allow users to 'move' their Bluesky account to their Mastodon profile's bridged account (an account that listens for your Mastodon posts and then replicates them on Bluesky so your Bluesky followers can see them), then take the bridged account and 'move' it to the user's Mastodon profile. How all this works under the hood is technically complicated because both platforms have different ways of handling migrations. That's why Bridgy Fed has to function as something of a middleman, enabling the transition with servers of its own, custom-built for the purpose of bridging and moves. Currently a proof-of-concept, the technology will launch into beta in a few weeks — but not for the casual user. 'I don't want to go as far as saying it's a tech demo, but it was really important to prove that this is possible,' says New Social's CEO and executive director, Anuj Ahooja. There are some complications at present, too. You can't move back to Bluesky's PDS because the social network hasn't built out that technology yet, for starters. Also, if someone on Bluesky who isn't bridged interacts with your 'moved' account, you won't see that once you're on the Mastodon side. But the team is working on developing a feature that will notify you of off-bridge interactions, Ahooja says. In addition, Bounce alerts you to how many of the people you follow aren't bridged, so if they ever do bridge, you can re-follow them. Image Credits:Bounce screenshot (A New Social) Ultimately, the team hopes the technology in Bounce would be obscured from the everyday open social user, who could instead decide simply what app they want to use and then go through a few short steps to move their following. And while today, Bounce supports Bluesky, Mastodon, and Pixelfed (an ActivityPub-based photo-sharing app), the longer-term goal would be to support any open social platform and protocol, whether that's a long-form blogging platform like Ghost, or even other networks like those running on Nostr or Farecaster. 'We're trying to create an interface for the open social web to handle some of these tougher movements that you have to make,' explained Ahooja. 'So, if you're unhappy with something Bluesky is doing — or even if you're not unhappy, but you feel like a platform on the ActivityPub side is doing something that you really needed to do…[you could] do these couple of clicks on Bounce,' he added. Bounce is the third project from A New Social. In addition to Bridgy Fed, the organization also launched a settings page a few weeks ago that makes the process of preparing to bridge easier and allows you to set a custom domain for your account. The overall goal at A New Social is to shift the power of social networks back to the people, not the platform makers, by giving them tools that let them move their account, their followings, and leave if a platform ever fails them in some way. This motto of 'People not Platforms' is now emblazoned on merch A New Social sells, like tees, hoodies, hats, cups, and stickers that help monetize its efforts, alongside its Patreon.

Prince George's teachers union votes no confidence in superintendent
Prince George's teachers union votes no confidence in superintendent

Washington Post

time32 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Prince George's teachers union votes no confidence in superintendent

The Prince George's County teachers union issued a vote of no confidence Wednesday in schools Superintendent Millard House II, citing concerns that his leadership has caused 'widespread dysfunction' across Maryland's second-largest school system. About 80 percent of voting members supported the action, the union said, which was conducted via a virtual vote. The vote came as the union is bargaining over its latest contract with the school system. Its current agreement expires June 30.

People are obsessed with the McDonald's Snack Wrap. These files prove it
People are obsessed with the McDonald's Snack Wrap. These files prove it

Fast Company

time32 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

People are obsessed with the McDonald's Snack Wrap. These files prove it

After nine long years, McDonald's has finally announced the revival of the Snack Wrap, one of its most beloved—and most copied—discontinued menu items. To herald the wrap's return, the brand made an entire digital archive dedicated to documenting fans' fervor for the Snack Wrap. The wrap returns after a number of other fast food chains, including Burger King, Wendy's, Chic-fil-A, and, most recently, Popeyes, have made their own dupes of the item in its absence. McDonald's' attempt to reclaim its Snack Wrap dominance comes as the company continues to face difficult financial headwinds; reporting its second consecutive quarter of sales declines in its first-quarter financial report on May 1. Now, the company is betting on fans' Snack Wrap nostalgia to score a boost this summer. On McDonald's' official website, a cryptic official statement from Joe Erlinger, McDonald's USA president, simply reads, 'It's back.' Accompanying the statement, though, is the link to a website called the Snack Wrap Files that's a wealth of Snack Wrap-based information. Per the site, the Snack Wrap will be made with McDonald's' McCrispy Strips in two flavors: ranch or spicy. It will be available as a combo meal and, at last, it has secured a spot as a permanent menu item. The Snack Wrap Files also serves another purpose: The site, which has a simple, early web vibe, is an archive dedicated to all of the times that McDonald's fans have yearned for the Snack Wrap since 2016. It's back. According to its FAQ section, the Snack Wrap Files was created 'to highlight the bond fans have with the Snack Wrap.' 'The Snack Wrap was phased out nationally in 2016, but it never left fans' hearts,' the website reads. 'From countless social media posts to full-fledged petitions, they never gave up on their favorite menu item. They're the ones who inspired us to make its return to the menu happen.' And McDonald's is dedicated to spinning that return into a dramatic, full-blown campaign. Currently, there are 10 folders on the Snack Wrap Files site, three of which are unlocked for public viewing. A countdown at the top of the page marks the time remaining before the other seven files are unlocked. In the 'Media Materials' folder, users can find official photos of the new Snack Wrap and FAQs about its return. Under 'BTS,' they can take a peek behind the curtain at McDonald's' creative team poring over Snack Wrap ad materials. But 'The Fandom' folder is where the site really shines. Within this section, the McDonald's team has compiled a highlight reel of fans' most fervent pleas for the Snack Wrap's return. Some are on the tamer side, like an email that reads, 'Is it true you're bringing back the Snack Wrap??!! I will be so excited!!!!!!' and another sharing, 'In fact I am 13 weeks pregnant and my biggest craving is something I can't have. I am due July 14th, 2025. Will snack wraps be back before then? Please just give me a hint.' Others take a more desperate tone. 'Where is the snack wrap. You guys promised me 2025, it is 2025. I do not see the snack wrap. Please get back to me, this is an important matter,' reads one inquiry. 'When the snack wraps are dropped I'm going to do a challenge where I try and eat 1,000 in a calendar year,' another says. 'If I record myself and post it on tik tok or something will you give me a reward?' One emailer resorted to a direct threat: 'I hope you're not playing with our emotions because I swear to god the people of the US will riot if you pull the rug from underneath us!' Whew. In three days, 23 hours, and 40 minutes (at the time of this writing), the Snack Wrap Files' cryptic 'Reaction Clips,' 'Merch Concepts,' 'Internal Emails,' 'Promo Codes,' 'Playlist,' 'Voice Note,' and 'Credits' folders will be unlocked.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store