Market intelligence

Booking.com: Hotels & Travel v66.3 triggers user revolt over undisclosed fees and payment failures in May 2026

Booking.com B.V. shipped version 66.3 in May 2026, triggering severe user backlash over hidden fees, payment failures, and fraudulent listings. The update drove the app's average rating down by nearly a full star as users reported sudden reservation cancellations and data security fears.

2 min read
The update has introduced or exacerbated critical issues around financial transparency and reliability, including undisclosed fees, payment processing failures, and the presence of fraudulent listings, leading to significant user backlash.
Booking.com: Hotels & Travel
On this page
  1. Backlash Over Hidden Costs
  2. Quiet Backend Alterations
  3. Trust Reversal
  4. Payment Processing Breakdowns
  5. Data Breach Context
  6. Mounting Retention Threat

Key takeaways

  1. 01Booking.com version 66.3 launched in May 2026 with uninformative release notes, masking critical backend changes to cancellation fees.
  2. 02The app's average rating fell from 3.54 to 2.58 stars as users revolted against poor financial transparency.
  3. 03Travelers report catastrophic payment failures where valid credit cards are rejected, leading to canceled vacations.
  4. 04A confirmed April 2026 data breach exposed customer reservation data, fueling a spike in targeted phishing scams.
  5. 05The platform faces a major trust crisis as competitors expand their hotel and rental offerings.

Backlash Over Hidden CostsLead

Booking.com B.V. released version 66.3 of Booking.com: Hotels & Travel in May 2026, sparking severe user backlash over undisclosed fees, critical payment processing failures, and fraudulent property listings.

Quiet Backend AlterationsRelease Summary

The official App Store changelog for the May 18 rollout offers little detail. Apple listing data shows the publisher cited only routine bug fixes and performance improvements.

However, developer documentation reveals backend alterations during the same period. A May 13 update to the accommodation API expanded the cancellation schedule to include post check-in fees earlier in the booking flow. This backend shift aligns with the sudden spike in user complaints regarding dishonest cancellation policies.

Trust ReversalUser Reception

The update triggered a sharp sentiment reversal, driving the average rating down from 3.54 to 2.58 stars. Prior to the release, reviewers frequently praised the platform for secure reservations and free cancellation options.

Following the v66.3 rollout, one-star reviews flooded the listing. Users consistently report financial opacity, with a 1-star reviewer on v66.3 stating the app allows hotels to hide additional fees that only appear after booking confirmation.

Payment Processing BreakdownsBreaking Changes

Beyond hidden costs, travelers report catastrophic payment system failures that actively disrupt trips. Reviewers describe instances where valid payment methods fail without notification, resulting in sudden reservation cancellations.

One 1-star reviewer on v66.3 noted the platform canceled their booking after failing to charge an old card, despite having two valid credit cards saved in the system. These acute processing errors leave users stranded and facing unexpected out-of-pocket expenses at the check-in desk.

Data Breach ContextRoot Cause

The post-update backlash coincides with the fallout from a major security incident. In mid-April 2026, the publisher confirmed a significant data breach where hackers accessed customer reservation data by compromising hotel partner systems.[4]

Criminals weaponized this data for highly convincing phishing attacks. Consumer advocacy groups have also documented a chronic problem with fraudulent or non-existent listings on the platform for over a year. Discussions on r/Bookingcom from earlier in 2026 detail how the platform's interface can allegedly display a low base rate at checkout while including significant mandatory fees in less visible parts of the page.

Mounting Retention ThreatExpert Verdict

The app maintains massive reach, securing nearly 2.5 million downloads over the last 30 days. Yet, this intense backlash over financial security poses a severe threat to user retention.

The company faces a mounting trust crisis that generic b[5]ug fixes cannot solve. Competitors like Airbnb are simultaneously expanding their offerings, including hotels and car rentals, creating a more competitive landscape where trust is a key differentiator. The publisher will likely need to overhaul its security verification and checkout transparency to halt further user churn.

Citations

  1. [1]

    The official release notes for version 66.3 offer no details on feature changes.

    "The official release notes for version 66.3 on the Apple App Store are generic, stating only, "This update contains several bug fixes and performance improvements.""
  2. [2]

    Backend changes to the cancellation schedule occurred days before the update.

    "A May 13, 2026, update to the accommodation booking API expanded the "cancellation schedule" to include "no-show stage (post check-in) fees" earlier in the booking data flow."
  3. [3]

    The app rating dropped significantly following the v66.3 release.

    "The rating drop from 3.54 to 2.58 stars after the v66.3 update is a direct result of user complaints about financial integrity and security."
  4. [4]

    Booking.com confirmed a data breach in April 2026.

    "* **Confirmed Data Breach:** In mid-April 2026, approximately one month before the app update, Booking.com confirmed a significant data breach."
  5. [5]

    Competitors like Airbnb are expanding their hotel offerings.

    "Competitors like Airbnb are simultaneously expanding their offerings, including hotels and car rentals, creating a more competitive landscape where trust is a key differentiator."

Sources

8 references

Maxime Doussin, CTO at MWM

Maxime Doussin

CTO

Maxime Doussin is the CTO of MWM, where he leads engineering, data infrastructure, and the mobile-app market-intelligence platform. He writes MWM's weekly app trend analysis, drawing on proprietary ranking data covering millions of iOS and Android apps across 150+ countries.

This article is an independent editorial analysis. App names, trademarks, and brands mentioned are the property of their respective owners. Market data and rankings referenced are based on MWM's proprietary estimates.

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