The results of my 1st travel rants poll are no surprise. 76% of voters don’t read holiday booking terms and conditions. Could travel companies do more to force us into reading the terms, or is it simply that people don’t want to read boring legal jargon?

By reading the terms you can make the decision if you want to book the holiday or flight, especially if there are charges you might have to pay under specific scenarios, i.e. cancelling your holiday, changing booking information..
The majority of websites provide a link to the terms but shouldn’t travel companies be forcing us to read it by displaying the terms and making us scroll down the page and click that you have read and agree to the terms before booking.
Interested to hear your comments..
Yvonne | 6 October, 2007 at 2:54 pm
Another point is do travel agencies go through the booking conditions with you when booking?
If they don’t should they?
Darren Cronian | 6 October, 2007 at 3:06 pm
Yvonne, they wouldn’t sell many holidays if they had to read out the t&c’s
We have to take more responsibility.
Lee Harrison (owner Select World Travel) | 8 October, 2007 at 8:19 am
Yvonne is Right, although yes, who wants to sit with a travel Agent for Hours going through T&C’s and not forgetteng reading through the Insurance documents.
We always point clients to the Booking Conditions especially the parts regarding the Clients responsibility to cancellation Charges, name changes etc, and the Tour Operators Liabilities when they can make changes etc and what compensation to expect.
Customers should always make sure, if they have a complaint, that in the first instance they report it to The Local representative in resort, Area or local Office or local agent and Hotel Manager etc. Always ask for a written acknowledgement.
In most cases a complaint can be sorted locally.
If However you don’t do this and wait till you get home, then you are unlikely to succeed in a complaint.
Simon | 8 October, 2007 at 1:21 pm
As someone who runs an ecommerce team maintaining a number of travel sites, this idea is quite an interesting one, which is implemented on some other non-travel sites.
The trouble is, people soon learn to simply scroll all the way to the bottom to activate the “Continue” button, especially as time goes on, people are becoming more and more computer and internet savvy.
Certainly from the web’s point of view it’s one of those “grey” areas which it’s hard to please everyone. I think so long as the terms and conditions are clearly presented and easy to navigate through, in case you only want to read about cancellations, then unltimately it is on the consumers head to take the initiative to read them.
From a Travel Agent Shop’s point of view – I wouldn’t want to sit there and be read through all of the conditions! I’d expect to be given a copy, and personally I would ask about cancellation charges, what happens if a hurricane decides it wants to ruin my holiday etc.
Karly | 9 October, 2007 at 8:39 pm
The laws in at least the United States are far too complex to be read to any non-lawyer and actually have them understand them.
If a company was forced to read you a concise version they would get the point across to you but they would not be covering their behind legally.
Of course there is the occasional company that takes advantage of this conundrum where we are unable to understand “properly worded” legalese and that is cannot read to us concisely where we would understand and the company would still be covering their butts. These companies should be heavily fined, but I guess the best we can do is report them to the BBB.
Anyways its a tough spot, with all the lawsuits flying at big companies these days they really have to cover themselves as much as possible, in the long run the solution should be to simplify law all together…but in the end that cannot be solved by a simplified reading or having someone cram the law down our throats. This especially does not work if you are booking online where most people just click “I Agree” on any contract they see.
So sorry for the thoughts with no solution I just thought it was an interesting topic…
Darren Cronian | 12 October, 2007 at 6:39 am
Good comments folks.
Good point Simon about consumers becoming much more internet saavy.
Only this week I received an email from a consumer complaining that the company wouldn’t refund his cancellation, but she had not read the T&Cs which stated that if the holiday was cancelled within 31 days of the departure no refund would take place.
If she had read this, she may have used another company to book her holiday and could possibly be not in this situation.
6 responses to “Forcing Travel consumers to read T&C’s”