Okay folks, let me tell you about my dumb adventure this Monday trying to book a hotel for my cousin’s wedding next month. Hotels near the venue? Crazy expensive. Figured I’d finally do what I always talk about – shop around properly. Spoiler: it worked, saved me a good chunk of cash.

Started Simple, Got Annoyed
First, like most people probably do, I just jumped onto one of those big, popular travel sites. You know the one. Put in the city, dates, saw some prices. “Alright,” I thought, “maybe $150 a night isn’t too bad?” But then I remembered my own advice – NEVER book the first price you see! Stupid, almost did it.
Opening Like, Twenty Tabs
Alright, time to put my money where my mouth is. I grabbed my laptop. I opened up:
- The first big travel site I always use.
- Another big one, the one that seems to own everything.
- That other platform where sometimes people rent places but also has hotels.
- The site famous for its last-minute deals (wedding isn’t last minute, but worth a peek).
- One focused on business travel, heard they sometimes have good rates.
- And finally, just for kicks, the hotel’s own official website.
My browser looked like a mess. Same city, same dates, just like… eight different tabs open. Started typing in details over and over. Getting coffee was a good call.
The Shock (Honestly)
Typing the same stuff again was boring, but wow, was it worth it. For the exact same hotel room on the exact same dates:

- Big Site #1: $149
- Vibe-Focused Site: $142 (Okay, a bit better)
- Booking Site: $135 (Whoa, getting interesting!)
- Hotel’s Own Site: $140 (Thought it’d be best, nope!)
Big Site #2: $162 (More? Seriously?!)
The range was nuts! $135 vs $162 for the same room?! That’s like dinner money difference! Definitely not booking with Site #2.
Got Slightly Fancier (But Not Hard)
Seeing that spread got me fired up. Figured I’d try two more little things people whisper about:
- Opening one site in my regular browser window and another in a private browsing window. Why? People say cookies sometimes track you and nudge prices up if you look too eager. Saw one price drop by like $3 on one site. Not huge, but hey, free $3 is a coffee.
- Tried changing my location setting on one site (just pretending I was browsing from a different area). Saw some weird fluctuations, a couple bucks cheaper, a couple bucks more, nothing super consistent. Mostly confusing.
- Got my old tablet out. Loaded the same site on my laptop and tablet side-by-side. Saw the price actually lower on my tablet for one site! Only $2 cheaper, but again… coffee money. So weird!
None of this was rocket science. Just took a few extra minutes and a bit of healthy suspicion.
The Sweet Reward
After checking everything? The clear winner was one of the big booking sites, showing $135 for the room I liked. Still double-checked the hotel’s own site – they were at $140, no special perks making it worth the extra fiver. Took a deep breath and clicked “Book Now” on that $135 deal. Felt good, man.

What I Learned (The Useful Bits)
- Looking at just one place is basically throwing cash away. You HAVE to open multiple sites. Period.
- The range is insane. Like, embarrassingly huge. Don’t trust the first number.
- Simple tricks matter: Try incognito mode. Glance at the price on your phone or tablet too. Doesn’t always work, but takes seconds.
- Always check the hotel’s own site. Sometimes they are cheapest or offer freebies. This time, they weren’t.
- Don’t just look at the room price! See what taxes and fees get added before you get excited. That $135? Ended up around $155 with taxes and resort fees. Still the cheapest option by far though.
Took me maybe 30 minutes total, start to finish. Saved me like $30-$40 bucks a night compared to the prices I almost booked out of habit. Multiply that over a few nights? Yeah, totally worth the minor headache. Do it. Seriously.