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Trivago cops $44 million fine over misleading hotel prices

Travel booking company Trivago has been fined $44.7 million for misleading consumers about its hotel room rates.

Apr 22, 2022, updated Apr 22, 2022
Travel webside Trivago has been fined for misleading travellers. (File image).

Travel webside Trivago has been fined for misleading travellers. (File image).

Trivago was found guilty in 2020 for telling consumers it would show them the cheapest rates, when it actually ranked hotels by factoring in which advertisers paid the highest per-click fee.

The misleading claims were featured in advertising and on its own site more than 400,000 times from late 2013 to mid-2018.

In a Federal Court judgment on Friday, Justice Mark Moshinsky said Trivago’s contravening conduct cost Australian users about $30 million and was intentional, rather than accidental.

“There is no evidence of Trivago paying compensation, or making any other form of reparation, to affected consumers,” Justice Moshinky said.

“Trivago’s contraventions have caused loss or damage to Australian consumers in the order of $30 million, and no remediation has occurred. In my view, this calls for a substantial penalty.”

The judge also said that while the penalty was many multiples of Trivago’s profit from the conduct, the $44.7 million fine was necessary for specific and general deterrence.

“A total penalty of the order proposed by Trivago would not reflect the seriousness of the contraventions and would be seen as an ‘acceptable cost of doing business’,” Justice Moshinky said.

Lawyers for Trivago had previously argued a fine of $15 million would be an adequate penalty, while the ACCC wanted the travel company fined $90 million.

Tim Begbie QC, representing the consumer watchdog, told the court in October last year that Trivago’s conduct was serious and far reaching.

He argued the weighting of search results according to what Trivago got paid was at the heart of its business model, and it offered a service it did not provide.

“What Trivago delivered to consumers was almost the opposite of what it promised,” Mr Begbie said.

There were 213 million searches for hotel rooms on the Trivago site over a period of about 13 months, which was less than half of the period the company had misled people, the court was told.

AAP has approached both the ACCC and Trivago for comment.

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