Loading Page...

Who is Skyscanner owned by?

Trip.com Group Limited (Chinese: ????) is a multinational travel service conglomerate headquartered in Shanghai, China. Founded in 1999, the company owns and operates several travel fare aggregators and travel fare metasearch engines including namesake and flagship Trip.com, Skyscanner, Qunar, Travix, and MakeMyTrip.



People Also Ask

Expedia owns Orbitz, Travelocity, Hotwire, eBookers and CheapTickets, while Booking Holdings comprises Booking.com, Priceline, Agoda, Kayak, Cheapflights, Rentalcars, Momondo and OpenTable. Ctrip, China's biggest travel agent, owns Trip.com, Tours4fun and Skyscanner.

MORE DETAILS

The latest round is reported to have put the company's valuation above $1 billion, adding Skyscanner to the growing list of European unicorns. Skyscanner brought on board five new investors for the latest round who all invested an undisclosed amount.

MORE DETAILS

Weaknesses of Skyscanner As with Google Flights, Skyscanner sometimes displays ghost fares that are no longer active. And, while it does have great flexible date searching, its fare calendar doesn't live-update, which means the pricing you see for less frequently searched routes might be incomplete.

MORE DETAILS

SkyScanner could be returning fares from shonky third parties that are actually round trip (round trip fares are often much cheaper than one way) with a dummy return leg, which is against the T+C's of the airlines. It's called throwaway ticketing.

MORE DETAILS

Our goal is to make the fares you see as transparent as possible. This means we don't take any kind of fee or influence your search results in any way.

MORE DETAILS

Bottom line: Google Flights and Skyscanner are two of the best sites for searching for flights. Both have some great functionality, but each also has some areas for improvement. That's why we often recommend pairing multiple search sites to ensure you're getting the best deal.

MORE DETAILS

Skyscanner is a middleman between you and the third-party website that you book your flight on. They don't take bookings and payments through their website. Once you've found the flight that you want to buy on Skyscanner's website, you're handed off to another website where you make the booking.

MORE DETAILS

What's a Hacker Fare? Instead of making you book one round-trip ticket from a single airline, KAYAK plays airfare matchmaker by finding two one-way tickets that together make a round-trip flight. Sometimes that means you might take a different airline home than the one you took to your destination.

MORE DETAILS

Yes, that's right, the search engine behemoth Google is also king when it comes to finding cheap flights. It's incredibly powerful, with tons of features that will help you zero in on the best prices for your flights … and maybe even get a refund if prices drop after you book thanks to its new Price Guarantee feature.

MORE DETAILS

If you're short on time, here's a quick answer to your question: Google Flights often displays cheaper fares because it pulls price data from multiple sources, including airline sites and online travel agencies.

MORE DETAILS

Both Skyscanner and Momondo let you sort results by cheapest, fastest, and best. While Skyscanner's “best” category is decided by a combination of price and flight time, Momondo reviews sometimes factor into what shows up under “Best”- and apparently, so might the commission they receive from sales via that OTA.

MORE DETAILS

Ownership: Expedia is a public company traded on the NASDAQ Stock Exchange. USA Networks Inc. owns approximately 65 percent of the company's outstanding shares. Principal Subsidiary Companies: Expedia and its subsidiaries operate travel Web sites in the United States, Canada, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

MORE DETAILS