The discussion around the pros and cons of rate parity has been around for almost a decade now. Regulations on the issue are, at best, patchy, with some countries where RP clauses are strictly prohibited (such as France, Austria, Italy, and Belgium), partially prohibited (Germany and Sweden), announced (Switzerland), or still unregulated (US and Latin America). With lower volumes of booking coming from OTAs during the pandemic, moreover, the debate about rate parity became even more heated: some properties decided to work in wide rate parity to avoid OTAs' dimming and improve their online visibility at the expenses of direct revenue, while other ones preferred to openly break rate parity on their top-performing channels. Both the OTAs and major hotel brands complicated the issue even further when they began offering out of parity “member only” rates, hidden behind an easily obtained loyalty program password. With so many different approaches and fragmented regulations, how should hotels deal with rate parity, especially after the whole industry has been severely hit by COVID-19?

Federica Salvatori
Federica Salvatori
Revenue & Commercial Strategy and Founder of Federica Salvatori Consulting

If is rate parity obsolete? I would rather and provocatively say that rate parity has never really existed, at least since the rise of metasearch and the phenomenon of B2B rates distributed in B2C platforms.

But now rate parity is not mandatory anymore, though OTA's still demand for it, what a paradox! And the risk is visibility penalization and deranking. But interestingly, on the same time third parties distribute lower rate by undercutting their commission, or using members-only and package/opaque rates to different targets with a consequent price dumping.

What is really important is not whether or not parity rate is obsolete, but how to distribute in this critical and messy landscape.

So, first of all OTAs have their members only or genius program (just to mention the main ones) and what does the hotel have? Even if a hotel built a loyalty program, how big its reach can be in comparison with the millions and millions of OTAs subscriber?

Let's try to reset and start from the basics:

  • Work on the value of your product and communicate it
  • Personalize your offer
  • Choose carefully each channel (online and offline) and the kind of offer (rate plan, policies, discounts) for each of them
  • Distribute in a healthy way by considering channel cost distributions and focusing on profit instead of fighting a war with the different channels.

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