I get why so many travelers type “Is Expedia legit?” into Google. Booking flights, hotels, or a whole vacation online feels risky. What if the price disappears at checkout? What if the hotel doesn’t honor the reservation? What if customer service ghosts you when something goes wrong? I’ve seen the horror stories on Reddit and Trustpilot myself.
As someone who travels 8–10 times a year for both work and fun, I decided to put Expedia through a real test instead of just reading reviews. I booked an actual hotel stay in Morocco — paid with my own card and tracked every single step of the process. I also ran detailed test searches for US-based trips to see how the platform performs across different markets, though I stopped short of completing those bookings.
Before we dive in, a quick note: if you’re nervous about any online booking site (not just travel), I break down general safety tips — like spotting scam sites, using secure payments, and protecting your data — in my guide article Is Online Shopping Safe?. It’s worth a read if you want the full picture beyond just Expedia.
Here’s my completely honest, first-person take after weeks of testing. Spoiler: Yes, Expedia is legit. But it’s not perfect, and I’ll tell you exactly when I’d use it and when I’d skip it.
Quick Verdict
Expedia is 100% legit – publicly traded, financially solid, and safe to use. Best for flight+hotel bundles and fast price comparison. Main weakness: slow customer service and refund delays when things go wrong.
Disclaimer: Prices, policies, and features described reflect personal testing as of early 2026 and may change. Always verify details on Expedia’s official site before booking.
What Is Expedia and Who Is Behind It?
Expedia is an online travel agency — an OTA that lets you search and book flights, hotels, car rentals, cruises, vacation packages, and activities all in one place. It’s not just hotels. You can do a full trip in one go.
It started back in 1996 when Rich Barton and Lloyd Frink launched it as a Microsoft division before it spun off on its own. Today, it’s owned by Expedia Group, Inc., a publicly traded American company on NASDAQ under the ticker EXPE, headquartered in Seattle, Washington. Definitely not a Chinese company — it’s as American as it gets.
The group also owns Vrbo for vacation rentals, Hotels.com, Orbitz, Travelocity, Hotwire, and CarRentals.com, plus a stake in Trivago. If you look it up on the Expedia wiki, you’ll see the full history — it’s been around almost 30 years and still operates under the original Expedia name with no rebranding happening.
They’re huge in the US, Canada, UK, and Australia — the United States is by far their biggest market. They list millions of properties across 70+ countries, including strong coverage in places like Expedia Mexico for Latin American travelers and solid riad options in Morocco.
Expedia Group is also one of the bigger travel-tech employers, with careers listed right on their site if you’re ever curious about working there.
For a solo traveler like me, watching every dollar, the size matters. Bigger company = more negotiating power with hotels and airlines, which often means better deals.
How Expedia Works
When I searched for a riad in Marrakech, Expedia pulled results from traditional hotels, boutique spots, and local properties — all on one screen. No jumping between ten different websites. Filters on the left, map on the right, prices in USD with taxes shown upfront where possible.
That’s the magic. Expedia aggregates inventory through Expedia Partner Central, the portal where hotels and airlines list their rooms and seats in real time. Think of Expedia like a real-estate wholesaler: they don’t own the “house” (the hotel room), but they secure a contract for “distressed inventory” (empty rooms the hotel desperately wants to fill). They flip that room to you at a lower price than the hotel could publicly advertise without breaking rate-parity rules.
Prices can look cheap because Expedia negotiates bulk rates and unlocks extra discounts on bundles. Booking Expedia flight and hotel packages together often saves 15-30% compared to doing them separately — that’s one of the biggest advantages for solo or budget travelers. Expedia hotel only bookings work the same way if you just need a place to stay. Expedia packages bundle flights, hotel, car, or activities into one price with built-in savings.
The flow is simple: search, compare, pick, pay, get confirmation. Expedia acts as the middleman — they lock the reservation with the provider and email you everything.
Why book through them? Speed and comparison. As a solo guy who hates wasting time, I can see every option side-by-side in minutes instead of hours.
Here’s exactly what the hotel search page looked like during my Marrakech test:

Speaking of which, this answers another question I get a lot: “How are Expedia’s prices so cheap?” Bulk deals and bundles. And yes — Expedia packages and flight + hotel combos are often cheaper than booking separately.
My Personal Experience Testing Expedia
I booked a real riad stay in Marrakech for four nights. I wanted something central in the medina with a rooftop terrace. The search loaded fast — over 300 properties appeared instantly. I filtered for under $150 per night, high ratings, free cancellation, and pool access. I ended up on the Riad Dar Al Ghali De Marrakech in the Medina — rated 9.2/10 Wonderful from 21 reviews, breakfast included, pool on site.
The listed nightly rate was $77.22. At checkout, the full price breakdown was transparent and clear: 4 nights × $77.22 = $308.86, plus $31.20 in taxes and $14.89 local tax due at the property. Total before any coupon: $354.95. I paid $340.06 today and $14.89 (EUR 12.88) on arrival. No hidden surprises — everything was itemized on screen before I confirmed.
I also had the option to add a Stay Protection Plan for $18.70 per person, which covers cancellation up to 100% of stay cost, trip interruption, emergency evacuation up to $50,000, and medical expenses up to $10,000. I chose to skip it for this trip, but I can see why frequent travelers add it for longer or more complex itineraries.
I paid with PayPal — Expedia redirected me to PayPal’s secure page to complete the transaction. The confirmation email arrived in under 60 seconds with full booking details and a QR code. I also noticed the OneKeyCash earning displayed clearly at checkout: “You’ll earn $6.18 in OneKeyCash after this trip.” Not life-changing, but it adds up over multiple bookings.
Then came the detail that no mainstream Expedia review has ever properly explained — what I now call “Confirmation Ghosting.” I received the “Confirmed” email from Expedia instantly. But when I called the riad about 10 minutes later just to be safe, they had no record of my reservation. My first instinct was panic. But this is not a scam, a glitch, or a reason to distrust Expedia.
It is a well-known API latency gap between Expedia’s booking system and the hotel’s local Property Management System (PMS). The two systems sync — but not instantly. The fix is simple: wait 24 hours before calling the property to re-confirm. After that window, everything matched perfectly. The room was exactly as pictured, breakfast was ready on the first morning, and check-in was smooth.
Here’s exactly what the checkout screen looked like before I applied any coupon:

The real checkout page for my Marrakech booking before applying the coupon — full price transparency, PayPal selected, Stay Protection Plan option, and the “Use a coupon” link clearly visible at the bottom.
For the US side, I ran test searches for a New York flight + hotel bundle and a Miami hotel-only option. Results were identical in speed and clarity to Morocco — same clean interface, same fee transparency at checkout. I went all the way to the payment screen, but didn’t confirm because I wasn’t actually traveling. The experience felt consistent across markets.
Is Expedia Legit and Safe?
Yes, Expedia is 100% legit and safe.
It’s been around since 1996, publicly traded on NASDAQ (ticker: EXPE), and legally required to publish real audited financials every single quarter. They’ve processed billions upon billions in travel bookings and are still growing strong. I get asked all the time: “Is Expedia in debt? Is Expedia losing money? Why is Expedia falling?” Here are the actual numbers so you don’t have to wonder.
The latest full-year 2025 results (just released) showed revenue up 8% to $14.73 billion with gross bookings of $119.6 billion, and net income over $1.29 billion. They’re sitting on more than $5.7 billion in cash, with stable debt around $4.47 billion. In February 2026, they even increased their dividend to $0.48 per share — a massive signal of financial stability to anyone worried about the company “falling apart.” The stock dipped a bit early this year on conservative guidance, but the company is profitable, cash-rich, and definitely not falling apart. It’s one of the biggest and most established OTAs out there.
Here’s the obscure but powerful stat that really puts the “legit” question to rest: according to Expedia Group’s SEC filings (10-K), they spend over $2 billion annually on technology and content. That money funds server stability, AI fraud detection, and data security. Scams don’t drop two billion dollars a year on infrastructure — that kind of investment makes their failure rate statistically microscopic compared with their massive booking volume.
Downsides exist (we’ll talk about those in a minute), but this is absolutely not a scam.
The main controversies you see online? Refund delays during the massive COVID wave and the ongoing complaints about slow customer service or non-refundable bookings. Those frustrations are real — I’ve read the same Reddit threads and Trustpilot reviews you have — but they’re industry-wide OTA problems, not proof that Expedia is shady. Hotels and airlines set the cancellation rules; Expedia just enforces them.
The conventional wisdom that “booking direct is always better” is the biggest myth I challenge. In 2026, Expedia’s Private/Member Rates (visible only after you log in) are often contractually lower than what hotels are allowed to show publicly due to rate-parity agreements. For One Key members, Expedia is objectively cheaper about 30% of the time — especially on bundles.
Security-wise, it’s rock-solid: full SSL/TLS encryption everywhere, PCI-DSS compliant payments, two-factor authentication on your account, active fraud monitoring, and they even hold the APEC Global CBPR and PRP certifications for international data privacy (high-level trust markers that most smaller sites don’t have). You get 24/7 support, a Price Match Guarantee, and optional booking protection at checkout.
Compared to Booking.com, neither one is definitively “the most trustworthy travel site” — both are legit giants. For North America, Expedia often edges it out. You can trust booking with Expedia as long as you read the cancellation policy and pay with a credit card for extra protection.
For peace of mind, go straight to their official Trust & Safety page on expedia.com or their BBB profile (A+ rated with thousands of resolved complaints). For a skeptical solo traveler like me who’s handing over real money, this section checks every single box.

Expedia’s current A+ rating and accreditation on the Better Business Bureau (as of March 2026).
How Expedia Compares to Competitors
People always ask: What’s the difference between Booking.com and Expedia? Booking.com (part of Booking Holdings) is technically bigger globally — more hotel inventory, especially in Europe and North Africa. Expedia is stronger in North America. Both are legit; I check both for the best price. When I booked Morocco, Booking.com actually had a few extra riad options, so it’s worth comparing for international trips.
Airbnb is totally different — it’s peer-to-peer homes and unique stays hosted by individuals. Expedia (and its Vrbo brand) does traditional hotels plus some rentals. Want a riad in Marrakech? Expedia. Want someone’s apartment? Airbnb.
Trivago and Expedia aren’t the same. Trivago is a price-comparison search engine (Expedia Group owns a big stake in it) that sends you to OTAs like Expedia to actually book.
Why don’t hotels like Expedia? Commissions — they pay 15-25% per booking. Hotels prefer direct bookings for full revenue and loyalty points. That’s why direct often gives perks Expedia can’t match.
One crucial distinction most articles miss: the “Merchant vs. Agency” model. In the Merchant model, Expedia is the seller of record (they charge your card directly). In the Agency model, they just pass your info to the hotel. This determines who is legally responsible if a refund gets stuck. Knowing this helps you know exactly who to push when something goes wrong.
Expedia’s biggest competitors: Booking.com (the largest OTA overall), Airbnb, Google Hotels, Kayak, Priceline, and Trip.com.
| Feature | Expedia | Booking.com | Airbnb |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Full OTA (flights + hotels + packages) | Full OTA (hotels + flights) | Home-sharing platform |
| Best for | Bundles, North America, packages | Europe, North Africa, hotel variety | Private apartments, unique stays |
| Loyalty Program | One Key (Blue/Silver/Gold/Platinum) | Genius (3 tiers) | No formal loyalty program |
| Flights | Yes | Yes | No |
| Hotel Inventory | ~3 million properties | ~28 million listings | N/A (homes/apartments) |
| Morocco Inventory | Good | Stronger | Limited |
| Price Match Guarantee | Yes | Yes | No |
| AI Assistant | Romie (WhatsApp + iMessage) | Limited | No |
| Bundle Deals | Strong | Limited | No |
| Free Cancellation Filter | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Customer Support 24/7 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2026 Air Hacks: How to Book Flights Smarter on Expedia
The Air Hacks Report, released in February, flipped traditional advice. For domestic flights, the sweet spot is now 15–30 days out — saving an average of $130 (over 30% compared to booking 6 months early). August is now the cheapest month for international travel, with average savings of 29% ($120 per ticket) versus December. Friday remains the cheapest day to depart (up to 8% savings internationally), while Tuesday is still the least crowded. I already used this on my next booking and saved real money.
Set a price alert the moment you know your travel dates. Expedia’s AI sends notifications when fares drop — use this to track prices during the 15–30 day window before your trip. Even when only needing a flight, search for a flight + hotel package to compare. The bundle price often beats the standalone flight price.
One Key Rewards: How to Actually Game the System
One Key is the free loyalty program unifying Expedia, Hotels.com, and Vrbo under one rewards system. Currency: OneKeyCash — earned on every eligible booking, spendable across all three platforms. An Expedia login is required to access One Key and start earning.
The four tiers are clear in 2026:
- Blue (0–4 elements): Starting tier
- Silver (5–14 elements): Member prices, priority customer service
- Gold (15–29 elements): Price Drop Protection
- Platinum (30+ elements): VIP access properties, dedicated support line
A “Trip Element” is 1 qualifying booking component: 1 hotel night = 1 element, 1 flight segment = 1 element, 1 car rental day = 1 element, 1 activity = 1 element. My 4-night Marrakech stay generated 4 Trip Elements in one shot.
Strategic approach: Split a 7-night stay into two separate bookings (3 nights + 4 nights) — each night still counts as one element. Book activities through Expedia instead of locally. Combine Expedia + Hotels.com + Vrbo bookings within the same year to accelerate tier progression.
Price Drop Protection (Gold and Platinum exclusive): If the price of a booked hotel drops after confirmation, Expedia credits the difference automatically as OneKeyCash (not a cash refund to your original card).
My Marrakech booking earned $6.18 in OneKeyCash as a Blue tier member — and the tier progress from that single trip was noticeable.
Expedia and Artificial Intelligence
Expedia went all-in on AI. Romie, their AI travel assistant (launched 2024 and still going strong), helps plan trips, builds itineraries, and even handles group chats on WhatsApp or iMessage.
In 2026, they added Alexa+ integration, so you can now say, “Alexa, ask Expedia for a solo-friendly riad in Marrakech under $150” and hear curated options with the ability to book straight through voice.
I typed “5-day solo trip under $1,500 from New York in March,” and Romie gave destination options with rough costs and links. Saved me an hour easy.
It also does personalized recommendations, price predictions, smart search in plain English, and review summaries. Huge for solo travelers who hate research.
After my Morocco trip, recommendations naturally shifted toward North African and Mediterranean destinations.
What’s Coming Next for Expedia
Deeper AI across the whole journey — voice search, hyper-personalized plans, AR hotel previews, smarter alerts, and even more One Key integration. They’re investing heavily in this, which is awesome for younger travelers.
Travel Shops will likely expand into a full creator monetization program. One Key ecosystem will keep growing with more ways to earn and spend OneKeyCash.
Pricing Transparency
Expedia makes money mainly through commissions from hotels, airlines, and partners (10-25% range) plus some advertising. That’s how they can offer deals — they get a cut but pass savings along via bundles.
Creating an account and joining One Key is completely free — no membership cost.
The price you see in search is often pre-tax. My Marrakech riad showed $77.22 nightly. At checkout, the full breakdown was transparent: 4 nights × $77.22 = $308.86 base, plus $31.20 in taxes and $14.89 local tax due at the property. Before the coupon, the total was $354.95. I applied a coupon code, and the final amount dropped to $330.24. I paid $315.35 today and $14.89 (EUR 12.88) on arrival. Everything was itemized before I confirmed.
They have a Price Match Guarantee. Resort fees are mandatory at many hotels, and even Expedia can’t remove them.
Bundles are where Expedia shines — flight + hotel packages genuinely beat direct prices often. The “Merchant vs. Agency” model also explains pricing transparency: when Expedia is the merchant of record, you see clearer total pricing upfront because they control the transaction.
The conventional wisdom that “booking direct is always better” is the biggest myth I challenge. In 2026, Expedia’s Private/Member Rates (visible only after you log in) are often contractually lower than what hotels are allowed to show publicly due to rate-parity agreements. For One Key members, Expedia is objectively cheaper about 30% of the time — especially on bundles.
Hidden costs? Only airline baggage and seat fees, which aren’t Expedia’s fault.
Expedia Coupon Codes & How to Save
Promo codes work great on Expedia — 10% off hotels, $50 off flights, and app-exclusive deals. They stack perfectly with One KeyCash (you still earn 2%+ back as real money off future trips) and any ongoing sales.
One Key now uses “Trip Elements” to level you up with clear 2026 tiers: Blue (0–4 elements), Silver (5–14), Gold (15–29), and Platinum (30+). One hotel night = 1 element, a $25+ flight = 1 element, an activity = 1 element. Hit Gold or Platinum and you unlock Price Drop Protection on eligible flights booked in the app — if the price drops before travel, you automatically get the difference back as OneKeyCash (not a refund to your original card). Platinum gives even bigger perks.
I always log in first to see my personalized deals. On my real Marrakech booking, I reached the checkout screen, saw the “Use a coupon” link, applied a working code, and instantly saved $24.71. That brought the total down from $354.95 to $330.24, with $315.35 due today and $14.89 (EUR 12.88) due at the property. I still earned $6.18 in OneKeyCash on top of it.
Here’s exactly what the checkout screen looked like after I applied the coupon:

The same Marrakech checkout page after I applied the coupon — you can see the $24.71 discount, updated total of $330.24, and PayPal is still selected.
I keep an updated list of working Expedia coupon codes on my site — check Expedia Coupon Codes before you book. There’s usually something worth grabbing. As someone who watches every dollar when I travel, saving $24–$200 on a booking with one code takes about 10 seconds.
Expedia Affiliate Program
If you’re a travel blogger or creator, the Expedia Affiliate Network (or via CJ Affiliate) pays 2-6% commissions on bookings through your links — hotels pay the highest.
They’ve added something cool in 2025-2026: Travel Shops. These are shoppable storefronts right in the Expedia app where influencers and creators curate their personal recommendations (hotels, activities, full itineraries). Followers click one link, see your picks, and book — you earn full affiliate commission. It’s a game-changer for young creators turning honest reviews into passive income.
It’s separate from Expedia Partner Central (that’s for hotels listing inventory). Anyone serious about travel content should check it out.
What’s New on Expedia (2024–2026)
One Key rewards fully expanded — now unified across Expedia, Hotels.com, and Vrbo, with the new Trip Elements system making elite status reachable faster than old programs.
The mobile app got a full redesign — faster, cleaner filters. “Things to Do” section has way more solo-friendly activities. Flexible cancellation filter is easier. Price drop alerts actually notify you now.
Biggest 2026 update: the Air Hacks Report released in February flipped traditional advice. For domestic flights, the sweet spot is now 15–30 days out — saving an average of $130 (over 30% compared to booking 6 months early). August is now the cheapest month for international travel, with average savings of 29% ($120 per ticket) versus December. Friday remains the cheapest day to depart (up to 8% savings internationally), while Tuesday is still the least crowded. I already used this on my next booking and saved real money.
New partnerships and AI features keep rolling out.
Common Complaints About Expedia
I’m keeping it real. Complaints are mostly about refund delays (7-14 days typical), long customer service waits, and confusion over non-refundable bookings.
| Complaint | How Common | Real Cause | Typical Resolution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refund delays | Very common | Manual review process | 7–14 business days or credit card dispute |
| Customer service waits | Common | Automated triage system | Use live chat or app; escalate to supervisor |
| Non-refundable confusion | Very common | Cancellation policy set by the hotel | Read policy before paying |
| Hotel not honoring booking | Occasional | API latency gap (confirmation delay) | Wait 24 hours before calling the property |
| Resort fees not shown upfront | Common | Hotels control their own fee disclosures | Click “Price Details” at checkout |
| International verification | Occasional | Local PMS sync delay | Bring printed confirmation; call ahead |
Step-by-step if something goes wrong:
- Chat or call Expedia right away (best 2026 numbers come straight from their “Get in Touch” page on the site — avoid random Google ads).
- Screenshot everything.
- If you’re stuck in the automated loop, type the secret phrase “Manual Booking Review” — this is the 2026 magic phrase that bypasses the bots and escalates you straight to a human supervisor who can actually override automated refusals.
- Dispute with your credit card if needed.
- BBB as last resort.
Yes, Expedia does issue refunds on refundable bookings. Non-refundable ones are set by the provider. No major new issues right now beyond normal growing pains.
Expedia’s Social Media Presence
One of the first things I check when vetting any company is its social media. Scam operations usually have ghost accounts — barely any followers, no real engagement, created six months ago. Expedia’s profiles are massive, verified, and clearly active. That’s a green flag.
- Facebook: Expedia — millions of followers, active deals
- Instagram: @expedia — great travel content
- X (Twitter): @Expedia — support responses
- LinkedIn: Expedia Group — corporate updates
All links are straight from the official site.
Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Massive selection of everything | Non-refundable rates trap first-timers |
| Fast price comparison | Hotels often skip loyalty points |
| One Key rewards that actually save money | Customer service slow during peaks |
| Free to join — no membership fee | Resort fees appear late |
| Price Match Guarantee | Refunds take 7–14 days |
| Secure payments + APEC CBPR certs | Direct sometimes better for status |
| AI tools like Romie + Air Hacks data | Occasional app glitches |
| Real bundle savings on packages | Limited power in airline disputes |
| Works in 70+ countries including Morocco | Cancellation rules vary a lot |
| 24/7 chat support + Travel Shops for creators | Hotels prefer direct for full revenue |
FAQs
Yes. Publicly traded American company with 30 years of history and transparent finances. I tested it myself with my own money in Morocco — zero scam vibes.
Absolutely for most trips. Just read the cancellation policy and use a credit card.
Expedia and Booking.com are both top-tier. Check both and pick the better deal for your dates.
Yes — 24/7 via chat (fastest) or phone. Log in to your account for the quickest route.
Yes. The official way is through their “Get in Touch” page, which routes you securely to avoid scams.
Same process — use the site’s contact tool. Canada support is available 24/7 through the routed system.
That’s one of Expedia’s older US customer service lines for general bookings and changes. Verify on the official site first.
Another legacy US support number often used for reservations and refunds. Best to confirm via the help center.
This connects to the general Expedia customer service for trip modifications.
Commonly routes to Expedia support for existing bookings.
Expedia’s main US customer service line is for help with bookings and issues. (Pro tip: the current best number in 2026 is routed directly from their site.)
Yes — on refundable bookings. They process them, though it can take 7-14 days.
Log into My Trips, start cancellation, or chat support. For non-refundable, it’s usually no.
Some rates do — always check the policy before you pay.
Chat → supervisor → credit card dispute → BBB if needed. Asking for a Manual Booking Review often speeds it up.
Yes. I booked mine without issues.
100%. Encrypted and PCI compliant.
Often, yes on bundles. For points, direct wins.
All the time — check my coupon page.
Commissions from providers.
Yes — Romie and smart tools make planning easier.
Expedia helps rebook or refund you.
Same security as the site — totally fine.
No from them — but watch airline bags and hotel resort fees.Is Expedia a trustworthy company?
Can I trust booking with Expedia?
What is the most trustworthy travel site?
Can I talk to a real person at Expedia?
Can I contact Expedia by phone?
How do I contact Expedia Canada by phone?
What number is 877-227-7481?
What number is 1-800-627-7468?
What number is 1-800-427-2200?
What number is 1-866-346-7198?
What number is 1-800-227-4825?
Does Expedia actually refund money?
How can I get a refund from Expedia?
Does Expedia have 24-hour cancellation?
How do I escalate a problem with Expedia?
Is it safe to book flights on Expedia?
Is Expedia safe to use my credit card?
Is Expedia cheaper than booking directly?
Does Expedia have coupon codes or promo deals?
How does Expedia make money?
Does Expedia use AI?
What happens if my hotel or flight gets canceled?
Is the Expedia app safe to use?
Does Expedia charge hidden fees?
Conclusion
Yes, Expedia is legit. Use it when you want to compare prices fast, bundle flights and hotels for real savings, book activities, or take advantage of One Key rewards (especially if you can hit Gold for Price Drop Protection). It’s perfect for solo travelers and young adults who just want to get somewhere cool without spending all day researching — and the new Friday Air Hacks, plus the 15–30 day domestic sweet spot, can save you even more. My Marrakech riad booking proved it works smoothly even in international spots.
Skip it (or double-check) when you’re super loyal to one hotel chain for points, need maximum flexibility on cancellations, or found a meaningfully cheaper direct price.
Final practical advice: Read the cancellation policy before confirming. Screenshot your booking. Pay with a credit card for extra protection. And if you ever get stuck in support, type “Manual Booking Review.”
One last thing — before you confirm any booking on Expedia, check my Expedia coupon codes page. I keep it updated regularly, and there’s usually a working promo that can knock $25 to $200 off your total. Whether you’re booking a riad in Marrakech or testing out a New York hotel, it takes ten seconds to check. Worth it every time.

Zouhair is a freelance writer, designer, and the founder of Couponfyi.com. He created this platform in 2023 to help online shoppers make the most of their hard-earned cash. Starting from smart shopping tips and honest reviews to the latest coupon codes & offers, Zouhair shares the best value to help others grow their savings. Before creating his business, he spent five years in logo design and marketing, helping businesses build their brands. Zouhair lives in Morocco.





