Rate Parity Monitoring May 2026: OTA Violations | TravelScrape

Author : Travel Scrape | Published On : 16 Jun 2026

What is rate parity — and why violations cost hotels

Rate parity means a hotel’s room is priced consistently across every channel it sells on. A violation — one OTA showing a lower price — pushes guests to the cheapest channel, which often carries the highest commission. The result is quiet margin leakage that rarely shows up until revenue is already lost.

Which channels broke parity most (illustrative)

Channel Violation rate Typical gap
OTA A 9% 2–4% below direct
OTA B 15% 3–6% below direct
OTA C 12% 2–5% below direct

Where violations clustered

TravelScrape data showed parity violations concentrated in metro-city properties and around high-demand weekends, when channels adjusted rates fastest. Leisure properties in Goa and Udaipur also saw elevated violations during peak summer pricing.

“1 in 7 hotel rate checks showed a parity violation in May 2026.” — TravelScrape Rate Parity Report

How it’s measured

TravelScrape scrapes the same room, dates and inclusions across 8 OTAs plus the direct site, then flags any channel priced below the others. All comparisons are like-for-like and timestamped.

Frequently asked questions

What is a rate parity violation?
When the same hotel room is priced differently across OTAs or below the direct rate. TravelScrape found this in 14% of May 2026 checks.
Why do rate parity violations matter?
They push guests to cheaper, higher-commission channels, quietly eroding a hotel’s net revenue.
How does TravelScrape detect parity violations?
By scraping the same room and dates across multiple OTAs and the direct site, then flagging any channel priced below the rest.