You booked what looked like a nice hotel on Booking.com, but the reality was nothing like the photos. Dirty rooms, broken amenities, misleading descriptions, or outright scams — these problems are more common than they should be. Here's how to get your money back.
When You're Entitled to a Refund
Booking.com may process a refund or credit when:
- The room doesn't match the listing: Different room type, missing amenities listed in the description, or photos that clearly misrepresent the property
- Cleanliness or safety issues: Bed bugs, mold, broken locks, no hot water, or other conditions that make the room uninhabitable
- Hotel cancels or overbooks: If the hotel can't honor your reservation, Booking.com should find comparable alternative accommodation or refund you
- Fraudulent listing: The property doesn't exist, is a different type than advertised, or the host is unreachable
- Check-in problems: You arrive and can't check in due to hotel-side issues
Step-by-Step: Getting Your Booking.com Refund
Step 1: Document Everything
Before leaving the hotel (or as soon as problems arise):
- Take photos and videos of every issue
- Screenshot the Booking.com listing showing what was promised
- Save any communication with the hotel
- Note the time and date you discovered each problem
- Get names of hotel staff you spoke with
Step 2: Report to the Hotel First
Talk to the front desk and give the hotel a chance to fix the issue. This matters because:
- The hotel may upgrade you or fix the problem immediately
- Booking.com will ask if you contacted the hotel first
- It shows you acted reasonably (important if you dispute later)
Ask the hotel to note the complaint in their system. If they refuse to help, note the staff member's name and move on.
Step 3: Contact Booking.com Within 24 Hours
Speed matters. Contact Booking.com through:
- In-app messaging: Open the Booking.com app > Your Trips > select the booking > Contact Us
- Phone: Call the number listed in your booking confirmation
- Online help center: help.booking.com
Explain the situation clearly:
- State what was advertised vs. what you received
- Mention you contacted the hotel first and they didn't resolve it
- Attach your photos and documentation
- Request a specific resolution (full refund, partial refund, or relocation)
Step 4: Escalate If the First Agent Can't Help
If the customer service agent denies your request:
- Ask to speak with a supervisor or the escalation team
- Reference Booking.com's "quality standards" and their guarantee that listings must be accurate
- Mention that you'll be filing a chargeback with your bank if they can't resolve it (this often gets attention)
- Leave a detailed review on Booking.com — hotels care about ratings and may agree to a refund to get it removed
Step 5: File a Chargeback If Necessary
If Booking.com won't refund and the hotel was genuinely misrepresented:
- Call your credit card company
- File a dispute for "services not as described"
- Provide your documentation: photos, listing screenshots, communication with Booking.com
- Most banks will issue a temporary credit while investigating
How to Maximize Your Refund Chances
- Act fast: Report issues within 24 hours of check-in
- Be specific: "The room had visible mold in the bathroom and the AC was broken" beats "the room was bad"
- Reference the listing: Point to specific discrepancies between what was advertised and what you received
- Be firm but polite: Agents are more helpful when you're clear about the problem without being hostile
- Know your rights: In the EU, consumer protection laws give you strong refund rights. In the US, your credit card's chargeback protection is your strongest tool.
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Document all issues with photos and video
- [ ] Screenshot the original Booking.com listing
- [ ] Report the problem to the hotel front desk
- [ ] Contact Booking.com within 24 hours
- [ ] Attach all evidence to your complaint
- [ ] Request a specific resolution (full/partial refund or relocation)
- [ ] Escalate to supervisor if initial request is denied
- [ ] File a credit card chargeback as last resort
Bottom Line
Your best leverage for a Booking.com refund is documentation and speed. Report issues within 24 hours, have clear photos showing the discrepancy between listing and reality, and be specific about what was misrepresented. If Booking.com won't budge, a credit card chargeback is your fallback — banks typically side with consumers when services don't match what was advertised.
Sources
- Booking.com help center and refund policies
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — chargeback filing guidance







