Book Direct With the Airline or Through an OTA? The 2026 Trade-Off

Laura
Book Direct With the Airline or Through an OTA? The 2026 Trade-Off
Photo par philippe patin sur Unsplash

In March 2026 a traveller booked a Newark–Lisbon round trip through a discount OTA for $612 — about $48 cheaper than United's own site showed. Then United cancelled the outbound leg. The airline's agents wouldn't rebook her because she wasn't the booking party; the OTA's call center put her on a 90-minute hold and rebooked her two days later on a worse routing. The $48 she saved evaporated the moment something went wrong.

An OTA — online travel agency — is a third-party booking site like Expedia, Priceline, Booking.com, Kiwi, eDreams, or Trip.com that sells flights it doesn't operate. Booking direct means buying straight from the airline (united.com, ba.com, delta.com). The price is sometimes identical, sometimes not — but the real difference shows up when your trip breaks. This is the single most important booking decision most travellers get wrong, and it almost never matters until it suddenly matters a lot.

What you actually trade away when you book through an OTA

The headline OTA pitch is price and convenience: one cart, multiple airlines, occasional exclusive discounts. All real. Here's what sits on the other side of the ledger.

  • You're not the airline's customer — the OTA is. When a schedule changes, the airline notifies the OTA, and the OTA is supposed to notify you. That extra hop is where things fall apart. Delay notifications arrive late or not at all.
  • You usually can't self-service the booking. Want to add a bag, change a seat, or use a flight credit? The airline's site will often say "this booking was made through a travel agency — contact them." Two phone trees instead of one.
  • Refunds route back through the OTA. When the airline refunds, the money goes to the agency first. Some pass it on in days. Some sit on it for weeks, or charge a "processing fee" to hand back your own money.
  • Cancellations and rebookings get slower. During a weather meltdown, the airline prioritizes its own ticket holders at the gate and on the phone. OTA passengers wait.

When booking direct is clearly worth it

Pay the airline directly — even at a small premium — when any of these is true:

  1. Long-haul or connecting itineraries. A nonstop JFK–MIA can survive an OTA. A LHR–JFK–LAX with a tight connection cannot afford a rebooking middleman.
  2. You hold elite status or want miles to count cleanly. AAdvantage, SkyMiles, MileagePlus, Avios and Virgin Points all credit more reliably on direct bookings, and elite benefits (free bags, upgrades) apply without the OTA fumbling your number.
  3. Basic-economy or anything you might change. Direct bookings let you use the airline's own 24-hour cancellation and flight-credit tools immediately.
  4. The fare is the same or within ~$30. If the OTA isn't meaningfully cheaper, there's no reason to add a layer of risk.

For a deeper look at how those 24-hour windows actually work, see our guide to free-cancellation tricks and the 24-hour rule.

The OTAs to be genuinely careful with

Not all third-party sites behave the same way. Based on consistent, well-documented patterns of customer complaints across the US and UK:

  • eDreams and its "Prime" subscription. A free trial that auto-enrolls you into a paid yearly membership is buried in many checkout flows. Watch for a pre-ticked subscription and an inflated "service fee."
  • Kiwi.com's self-transfer "Guarantee." Kiwi stitches together separate tickets on airlines that don't cooperate. If your first flight is late, the second airline owes you nothing — Kiwi's paid Guarantee is the only fallback, and using it is slow.
  • Mystery-cheap aggregators you've never heard of. The "$40 below everyone" fare on an unfamiliar site is often a fare on hold, a currency trick, or a booking that simply fails after you pay.
  • Trip.com / Gotogate / Mytrip / BudgetAir — fine for some, but read who's actually issuing the ticket and what the change/refund policy says before you click.

The pattern: the cheaper and more obscure the OTA, the harder the recovery when something goes wrong.

When an OTA is the smart play

OTAs aren't villains. They earn their place when:

  • You're mixing two airlines that don't sell each other's flights (e.g. an outbound on JetBlue, a return on Alaska) and a reputable OTA like Expedia bundles them at a genuine discount.
  • The savings are large and the trip is simple — a single nonstop with no bags and flexible dates.
  • You want hotel + flight in one package where the bundle price genuinely beats booking the two separately.

Even then, prefer the established names with real support over the discount-of-the-week site.

The screenshot-worthy comparison

A realistic round-trip JFK–LAX, same flights, booked two ways:

Scenario Direct with airline Discount OTA
Sticker price $328 $292
Cancellation (24h, US DOT rule) Full refund, self-service Refund via OTA, 5–21 days, possible fee
Airline cancels your flight Rebooked at the gate, priority Call the OTA, wait, worse rebooking
Add a bag / change a seat On the airline app "Contact your travel agency"
Miles & status Credited cleanly Often partial or missing

The OTA wins by $36 until the day it doesn't. Price the risk, not just the fare.

The 2026 angle

US DOT rules now force automatic, prompt refunds for cancelled and significantly-changed flights — but the rule binds the airline, and the money still flows back through whoever sold you the ticket. In 2026 that makes the OTA-vs-direct choice more about speed of recovery than raw price. AI trip planners and chat assistants will happily surface the cheapest OTA fare; almost none of them weigh refund friction. That's the gap a smart traveller closes manually.

The cleanest play is to find the lowest real price first, then book it directly with the airline whenever the gap is small. That's exactly what Flyozo is built for — we watch fares 24/7 across United, Delta, BA, JetBlue and the LCCs, and the moment a route drops 30–80% we send you the alert so you can book direct, at the OTA-beating number, with none of the third-party risk. Premium runs about $24 a year, roughly one avoided OTA "service fee."

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