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BlogTrip.com Review 2026: Is It Actually Cheaper Than Booking Direct or Using Expedia?
Travel

Trip.com Review 2026: Is It Actually Cheaper Than Booking Direct or Using Expedia?

David Park

Por David Park

2026-03-10Updated Mar 23, 20266 min read
Trip.com Review 2026: Is It Actually Cheaper Than Booking Direct or Using Expedia?

Trip.com is less familiar to Western travelers than Expedia or Booking.com, but I've been using it for Asia-Pacific routes for the past two years and it's earned a permanent spot in my booking process. Here's when it's worth using and when it isn't.

What Trip.com Actually Is

Trip.com is the international brand for Ctrip, which is essentially the Expedia of China. It's enormous — one of the largest travel booking platforms in the world — but it's only recently started marketing aggressively in the US and Europe.

The inventory is deep: flights, hotels, car rentals, airport transfers, and activities across 200+ countries. For Asia-Pacific routes especially, they often have inventory and deals that Western OTAs don't surface.

Where Trip.com Is Genuinely Cheaper

I've found consistent advantages in three areas:

Asia-Pacific flights. Routes between Asian cities (Tokyo-Seoul, Bangkok-Singapore, Hong Kong-Taipei) often show prices on Trip.com that are 15-25% lower than the same routes on Expedia or direct airline sites. This isn't universal, but it's frequent enough to make checking Trip.com mandatory before booking any Asia-Pacific trip.

Asian hotels. Particularly in China, Japan, South Korea, and Southeast Asia, Trip.com's relationships with local hotel chains give them rates that Western platforms don't match. I've booked business hotels in Tokyo for 20% less than the equivalent rate on Booking.com.

Connection flights involving Asian carriers. Airlines like China Southern, Air China, ANA, and Asiana often have better promotional rates showing on Trip.com than they push through Western distribution channels.

Where Trip.com Is Not Cheaper

For US domestic flights, Trip.com is rarely the best option. Google Flights or booking direct will usually beat it.

For European hotels, Booking.com is still typically better — they have stronger inventory and loyalty rates in Europe.

For Las Vegas, New York, London hotel deals, I don't bother checking Trip.com first. It's not their strength.

Customer Service: The Honest Assessment

This is where Trip.com falls short of Expedia, and it matters.

Their customer service is slower to respond, and complex issues (flight cancellations, rescheduling, refund disputes) take longer to resolve. I've waited 3-4 days for resolution on issues that Expedia would handle in a few hours.

For simple bookings that go smoothly, you'll never notice. For complex international itineraries with tight connections, or if you need to change plans at the last minute, the slower customer service is a real risk.

My approach: use Trip.com for simple point-to-point bookings on well-established routes. Keep Expedia for complex multi-leg itineraries where I might need to make changes.

The Trip.com Loyalty Program

Their "Trip Coins" loyalty program gives real rebates — typically 1-2% of booking value, sometimes more with promotional offers. It's not transformative, but it accumulates. I've redeemed about $60 in credits over two years without thinking about it much.

Members also get access to exclusive member rates, similar to Expedia's One Key.

Practical Booking Tips

  1. Always check both Trip.com and Expedia for any international booking. Takes 2 minutes and sometimes saves $100+.
  2. Read cancellation policies carefully. Trip.com's policy display is sometimes less clear than Expedia's. Make sure you understand what you're agreeing to.
  3. Use the app. App-exclusive deals show up regularly, and the mobile experience is genuinely better than the desktop site.
  4. Look for "flash deals" — Trip.com runs time-limited promotions that can be excellent. The homepage features these prominently.

The Bottom Line

Trip.com is not a replacement for Expedia or Booking.com — it's a complement to them. Add it to your comparison-shopping routine, especially for anything involving Asia-Pacific travel. For those routes, it regularly wins on price. For everything else, it's worth a quick check but not your first stop.

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