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Hotel PolicyJuly 2026·11 min read

Expedia Is Ending Its Hotel Price Guarantee: Here's What to Do Before July 28

Starting July 28, 2026, Expedia and Hotels.com will drop the Hotel Price Guarantee, with no replacement announced. Here's what's changing, which sites still price-match, and why booking refundable is about to matter a lot more.

TL;DR — Key takeaways

  • Starting July 28, 2026, Expedia and Hotels.com are ending their shared Hotel Price Guarantee as part of a broader overhaul of One Key, Expedia's rewards program. No replacement program has been announced.

  • It's part of a bigger squeeze: Expedia's cash-back rewards (OneKeyCash) will depend on your membership tier, and flights will no longer earn rewards at all.

  • Book refundable rates on Expedia and Hotels.com going forward. Once the guarantee is gone, a refundable rate is the only built-in protection left if the price drops after you book.

  • Booking.com's "We Price Match" is still active with no claim deadline: file any time before check-in.

  • Priceline's Best Price Guarantee (for its VIP loyalty tier, 24-hour window) and Hotwire's guarantee are also still running.

  • Already have a booking? Cancel-and-rebook still works on refundable rates, or ask customer service directly. After July 28, there's no guaranteed program behind that request.

  • The real lesson: a price guarantee tied to one booking site's current policy can vanish overnight. Independent price tracking doesn't depend on any single seller's goodwill.

For years, Expedia and Hotels.com sold peace of mind along with the room: book with us, and if you find a lower price afterward, we'll make it right. That pitch is going away. Starting July 28, 2026, both sites will eliminate the Hotel Price Guarantee outright, part of a broader overhaul of One Key, Expedia's rewards program, that will also cut earning rates for most members and kill rewards on flights entirely.

No replacement program has been announced. This is a real downgrade for anyone who books hotels through Expedia or Hotels.com: right now, a lower rate after booking is something they'll still make right. After July 28, that protection disappears. The practical response is simple, and it starts now: book refundable rates going forward, because that becomes the only built-in protection you have left. This guide covers exactly what's changing, which competitors still run a real price-match program, what to do with an existing booking, and why refundable rates are about to matter a lot more on these two sites.

What Expedia and Hotels.com are ending

The Hotel Price Guarantee lets a member who finds a lower publicly available rate after booking file a claim and get the difference back. That ends July 28, 2026. It's shared infrastructure: Expedia and Hotels.com are both owned by Expedia Group and both run on the One Key rewards program, so the guarantee (and its removal) applies to both sites identically.

Hotel Price Guarantee: ending July 28

Going away on both Expedia and Hotels.com starting July 28, 2026. No replacement price-match program has been announced.

OneKeyCash: going tiered

Flat 2% cash-back earning goes away. Starting July 28, how much you earn depends on your membership tier, and that tier depends on how much you book with Expedia each year.

Flight rewards: going away

The 0.2% earning rate on flight bookings (already close to negligible) is being removed entirely starting July 28. Only the hotel and car portions of package deals will still earn OneKeyCash.

What's protected

OneKeyCash you've already earned keeps its value, and trips booked before July 28 will earn at the pre-change rates. Top-tier members are also slated to get flight-delay lounge access later in 2026.

Taken together, the changes read as a single decision: trim costs across the rewards program, and the price guarantee (a feature that requires staff time to verify and pay out claims) is one of the things being cut.

Why booking sites offer price guarantees in the first place

A hotel price guarantee is mostly a confidence pitch, not a discount mechanism. Shoppers routinely bounce between Expedia, Booking.com, Google Hotels, and a hotel's own site before committing. A guarantee is designed to end that comparison shopping right there: book now, you're covered either way. The value to the booking site is fewer abandoned carts and less tab-hopping, not the occasional payout.

That only works as long as claims stay rare and cheap to process. The moment a company decides a program costs more in support overhead than it earns back in booking confidence, it gets cut. That's exactly what's happening here, bundled into a rewards overhaul that also reduces what members earn on every booking.

The tell: it's bundled, not standalone

Expedia didn't announce “we're ending price protection” as its own headline. It's landing inside a wider rewards overhaul (new tiers, no flight rewards) where a guarantee that mostly functioned as marketing can be quietly dropped without becoming the story on its own.

Which booking sites still price-match in 2026

Expedia and Hotels.com dropping out doesn't mean the category is dead. Here's what's still standing.

SiteProgramClaim windowStatus
ExpediaHotel Price GuaranteeUntil Jul 28, 2026Ending Jul 28, 2026
Hotels.comHotel Price GuaranteeUntil Jul 28, 2026Ending Jul 28, 2026
Booking.comWe Price MatchAny time up to check-inActive
PricelineBest Price Guarantee (VIP loyalty tier)24 hours after bookingActive
HotwirePrice-match on Hotwire / Hot Rate bookingsVariesActive

Booking.com's We Price Match is the most flexible of the group. There's no 24-hour cutoff, so you can file a claim any time before your stay, and it covers non-refundable bookings too. Priceline's Best Price Guarantee is narrower (it's a perk for members of its VIP loyalty tier, with a 24-hour window), but Priceline's discounted “Express Deals” bookings go further for last-minute drops, refunding 200% of the difference up until midnight before travel.

The fine print that limits these guarantees anyway

Even setting aside Expedia's upcoming change, these programs have never been as generous in practice as the marketing implied. As one 2026 guide to hotel price-match guarantees put it, successful claims “have become much harder to land than they used to be.” Worth knowing about if you happen to spot a lower rate, but not worth actively hunting for.

You have to find the rate yourself

None of these programs monitor prices for you. You're expected to notice a lower rate on another site, screenshot it, and file the claim, usually before the fare changes again.

The comparison has to match exactly

Same room type, same cancellation policy, same dates, same occupancy, and the lower rate must be publicly bookable, not gated behind a membership, credit card portal, or an opaque “mystery hotel” deal like Priceline's Express Deals, where you don't find out the exact property until after you book.

A program can disappear with no personal notice

If you're relying on an in-progress Expedia or Hotels.com guarantee claim, get it resolved before July 28. Once the cutoff hits, there's no program left to appeal to, no matter how the claim was going.

What to do about your Expedia or Hotels.com booking

This is a real downgrade if you book with Expedia or Hotels.com regularly, and the fix is simple: from here on, book refundable rates. A refundable rate is the one form of protection that survives the guarantee's disappearance, because cancel-and-rebook doesn't care what program Expedia is or isn't running.

The one rule that matters now

Refundable rates let you cancel and rebook at a lower price yourself, with or without a guarantee behind you. Non-refundable rates lock you in no matter what happens to the price, and after July 28 there's no program left to bail you out. If a refundable rate on Expedia or Hotels.com costs a little more, that difference is now buying you the only price protection the sites have left.

Free-cancellation rate

Rebook, then cancel the original

1.

Book the same hotel and room at the lower rate first, to lock it in.

2.

Log in to your Expedia or Hotels.com account and cancel the original booking.

3.

Confirm the refund, typically 5–10 business days back to your card.

Non-refundable rate

Ask, but don't expect a program behind it

Until July 28, you may still be able to file a Hotel Price Guarantee claim, so contact customer service and ask. After that date, there's no policy obligating them to say yes. It becomes a goodwill request, not a claim.

This is a real loss, and what it means for every guarantee

Make no mistake: losing the Hotel Price Guarantee is a genuine downgrade for anyone who books hotels through Expedia or Hotels.com. It was free protection, and soon nothing will replace it. But the moment is also a useful reminder of how much to trust any booking site's price guarantee generally: it's a policy the company can change at will, without asking you. Booking.com, Priceline, and Hotwire all still run one today, and so did Expedia, right up until it didn't.

The part these programs never covered (someone actually watching the price for you) was always the harder problem. A guarantee only pays out if you notice a lower rate and file before it changes again. That's work, on a deadline, that most people simply don't do. Booking refundable is the durable habit; watching for drops is the other half of the equation.

Or let Plot watch the price for you, wherever you booked

Instead of relying on whichever price-match policy a given booking site happens to be running this year, Plot tracks your actual hotel rate against the market until check-in, regardless of where you booked.

Relying on a booking site's guarantee

1.

Only works if the site you booked with still runs one

2.

You have to notice and document the lower rate yourself

3.

Narrow eligibility rules on room type, policy, and dates

4.

The program can be discontinued with no notice to you

With Plot

1.

Book anywhere: Expedia, Booking.com, direct, doesn't matter

2.

Forward your confirmation to plans@plot.travel

3.

Plot alerts you when a lower rate appears, with platform-specific claim instructions ready to go

The upside of independent tracking is that it doesn't care which policy Expedia is running this quarter. It watches your rate either way.

Frequently asked questions

Does Expedia still have a hotel price guarantee?

Yes, until July 28, 2026. After that date, Expedia is discontinuing its Hotel Price Guarantee as part of a broader overhaul of One Key, its rewards program, with no replacement price-match program announced.

Does Hotels.com still price match?

Yes, until July 28, 2026. Hotels.com shares its rewards program and hotel inventory with Expedia under One Key, and its Hotel Price Guarantee is ending on the same date, for the same reason.

What if I booked through Expedia or Hotels.com and the price drops?

Before July 28, you may still be able to file a Hotel Price Guarantee claim, so contact customer service and ask. After that date, your options are the same ones available on any hotel booking site without a price-match program: if you booked a free-cancellation rate, rebook at the lower price first, then cancel the original for a refund. If your rate is non-refundable, your only recourse is asking customer service directly, with no guaranteed program backing the request anymore.

Which booking sites still offer a hotel price guarantee in 2026?

Booking.com's "We Price Match" is still active and has no claim deadline. You can request it any time up until check-in. Priceline's Best Price Guarantee covers members of its VIP loyalty tier who find a better rate within 24 hours of booking (and travelers who book its discounted "Express Deals" get 200% of the difference back up to midnight before travel). Hotwire also still runs a guarantee covering its Hotwire and Hot Rate bookings.

Why is Expedia getting rid of the Hotel Price Guarantee?

It's part of a cost-cutting overhaul of One Key, Expedia's rewards program: starting July 28, the cash-back you earn (OneKeyCash) will depend on your membership tier instead of a flat 2%, and flights will stop earning rewards entirely. Removing a guarantee that requires staff time to verify and pay out fits the same pattern, trimming a feature that mostly functioned as a marketing trust signal rather than one travelers used heavily.

Should I book refundable rates on Expedia and Hotels.com now?

Yes. Once the Hotel Price Guarantee is gone, a refundable rate (one you can cancel for free, usually up to a day or two before check-in) is the only built-in protection you have left if the price drops after you book: cancel the original, then rebook at the lower rate. A non-refundable rate saves a little upfront but leaves you exposed to every price move afterward, with no program standing behind you anymore. If flexibility costs a few dollars more, it's worth paying for on these two sites specifically.

Sources

Related reading

Stop trusting a booking site's guarantee to protect your rate.

Forward your hotel confirmation to Plot and we monitor the price ourselves, independent of whatever policy Expedia, Booking.com, or anyone else happens to be running this month.