Jul
01

Holiday Rental Scam Shocks Letting Industry

The times is reporting that up to 100 families have lost an average of £3,000 after booking fake Spanish holiday villas through the website morairaway.com, which has now gone offline and whose owners are unreachable. There are concerns that exposure of this alleged rental scam will affect confidence in the holiday letting market at a time when tourist numbers are falling, or worse still, fraudsters will setup copycat holiday rental scams.

How did this happen?

holiday rental scam It appears that morairaway.com placed villa adverts on leading holiday letting rental sites where holidaymakers book direct with villa and apartment owners. These lettings sites refer enquiries to holiday home owners and agents who advertise on the sites. They do not take bookings themselves.

Following what seemed legitimate correspondence with staff at morairaway.com, unsuspecting families proceeded to book expensive villa holidays, the majority paying via bank transfer. Receipts, booking confirmations and key collection details were sent out. A process that is typical of holiday let owners so nothing appeared unusual until the alleged scam was exposed.

Unfortunately, as many of the alleged victims paid by bank transfer they have little financial protection against such frauds. It is reported that many will lose the thousands paid for accommodation that doesn’t exist.

What consumer protection do people have when booking holiday lets

There are concerns that the publicity of this alleged scam will affect confidence in the holiday rental market, but what protection do consumers have? As highlighted by this alleged fraud, very little when not paying by credit card or Pay pal. But a large proportion of holiday home owners only take payments via cheque or bank transfer.

Maybe it’s time for holiday rentals to be regulated or for an industry wide consumer protection scheme similar to ATOL and ABTA to be developed.

Rental guarantee

It should be noted that some holiday rental websites offer a holiday rental guarantee against internet fraud should a property booked via their site turn out to be fraudulent. They will reimburse up to a specified amount of the rental fee you have paid – note flights, car hire etc. are not covered.

There are also holiday insurance products available that provide more comprehensive protection against fraud, but these cost extra.

Responsibilities of the holiday rental sites

Although the holiday rental sites involved commented that they carry out a number of fraud prevention checks on advertisers, there is scope to improve these checks to prevent this happening again.

Suggested fraud prevention improvements to protect consumers:

  • liaise with other rental portals or an industry regulator to share data on known scammers
  • ask advertisers for copies of utility bills etc, as proof of ownership
  • offer a credit card facility for advertisers to take payments from renters
  • audit advertisements where availability calendars aren’t updated and there are high numbers of booking requests and enquiries
  • provide full rental guarantees for bookers – as standard

Show consumers looking to book your holiday let that they can trust you

trustFollowing the alleged morairaway.com scam, I expect holidaymakers will be more cautious when booking holiday homes. After all, what proof is there that your holiday let exists?

To overcome doubts consider providing signs of trust:

  • show testimonials from past guests and get verified reviews on rental sites such as holiday-rentals.co.uk and flipkey
  • make guests aware of the holiday-rentals.co.uk rental guarantee scheme
  • provide your address on booking contracts
  • take credit card or Pay Pal payments
  • be prepared to provide copies of utility bills to prove ownership
  • if you advertise on holiday letting sites, your advertisement will usually show details of when you first advertised on that site. If you have been listed for some years, this is a sign that you are established

Hopefully the Spanish police investigation will catch the perpetrator of this alleged fraud, although I imagine this will be of little comfort to the unfortunate victims who are without a summer holiday.

Update: Timesonline has reported that Thames Valley Police have now completed an assessment of the Morairaway.com case and will lead the investigation in the UK.

They are appealing for victims to make statements, which is positive news for the victims. Hopefully justice will catch up with the purpotrators.

How can this be prevented from happening again? Please add your comments below or read our tips on how to check if a holiday apartment or villa is a scam

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4 Comments to Holiday Rental Scam Shocks Letting Industry

  1. Rob says:

    Great post.
    I looked into the protection offered by paypal but it seems like if you don’t make a claim before 45 days then it won’t be valid.

    • Phil says:

      Thanks for pointing this out. This could be an issue as the peak booking season for summer holidays is usually January, some 5-6 months before holidays are taken. If a fraud was identified a few weeks before the holiday, several months after booking and paying, then there could be a problem reclaiming payments sent.

  2. Liz says:

    I wish I’d found your blog sooner. We’ve just been scammed by someone using a holiday rentals site to advertise. It’s about time these websites were made to be accountable for who they let advertise on there sites. Surely there has to be some protection for the consumer. As for sites offering free holiday rental guarantee, I can only find insurance at an extra cost.

    • Phil says:

      Hi Liz,

      Sorry to hear of your situation.

      I assume you have exhausted all attempts to contact the property owner?
      Have the rental site confirmed it’s a scam?

      Unfortunately the only protection is by following the steps I outlined – including paying by credit card. But this is of little avail after the scam unfortunately.

      Did the site you booked with offer a holiday rental guarantee?

      Phil

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