Booking Air Travel? A Tip to Maximize Cash Back
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While earning cash back on most internet stores is surprisingly easy, earning cash back on air travel has, at least in my experience, always proven to be a unique challenge. However, it seems that William Shatner can once again prove useful.
The Cash Back Challenge
As a general rule of thumb, any airfare results that you get on one travel website should also be available on other websites – in other words, that same fare you pulled up on Expedia should be bookable on Orbitz or even the airline’s own website (there are of course exceptions: student airfare, consolidator fares, special airline deals, etc.).
You may notice that the price sometimes varies by a few dollars — this is usually because major booking websites like Expedia, Travelocity, and Orbitz tack on a booking fee for your purchase raising the price by a few dollars.
This becomes problematic when you look at what sort of cash back is generally offered on travel sites. For the most part, very few airlines offer cash back for purchases made on their website; some offer a meager return, some (like American Airlines, which I frequently fly) offer nothing. On the other hand, booking websites like Orbtiz, Travelocity, etc. offer sizable cash back but that five dollar booking fee often wipes out (or worse) the benefit from potential cash back. Until recently, this meant that it was pretty much a wash: either get the cash back and see it get wiped out by a booking fee, or skip the cash back and skip the booking fee.
Enter Priceline
Priceline.com has changed the situation, though. Priceline.com is usually known for the “Name Your Own Price” feature, where you can bid on hotel and airfare; however, Priceline also offers traditional bookings just like any other travel website. What makes them different is that Priceline now does not charge a booking fee — so that itinerary you found on Orbitz that includes a $5 booking fee would cost you $5 less at Priceline.com. Priceline also offers generous cash back at several sites including FatWallet (4% back at time of writing) and EBates (2%).
I recently helped a friend book a $250 airline ticket that she found on United’s website. By choosing to book it at Priceline instead, she got the same itinerary for the same price that United.com offered, but also earned 4% cash back through FatWallet; that’s $10 saved - not bad!
So keep Priceline in mind next time you’re looking to book airline tickets.
