The $11 Billion Problem: Travel Payment Fraud Escalates in 2025
The online travel market is surging toward a projected $8.6 trillion by 2032, with the sector already surpassing $1.7 trillion in transactions last year. That growth attracts more than legitimate customers. According to Ravelin’s 2025 Global Fraud and Payments Survey, the average travel, ticketing, or hospitality company now loses $11 million annually to fraud.
For merchant service providers and travel merchants alike, understanding current fraud patterns is not optional. It is a survival requirement.
Current Fraud Landscape by the Numbers
The financial impact is staggering. The travel and hospitality sector collectively lost an estimated $11.2 billion to payment fraud, per TTEC research. Individual fraudulent bookings average $1,500 in losses, significantly higher than most retail sectors.
Account takeover incidents surged 65% year-over-year. Chargebacks now affect 2.3% of online travel transactions. Globally, card-not-present (CNP) fraud losses are projected to reach $28.1 billion by 2026, a 40% increase from 2023 levels. Chargeback volume alone is expected to hit 146 million cases valued at $15.3 billion this year.
Top Fraud Patterns Targeting Travel Merchants
Credit Card Fraud
The most common threat remains straightforward credit card fraud using stolen card data. Fraudsters target high-value reservations, particularly international flights and luxury hotel stays. Last-minute bookings are especially attractive because they minimize the window for detection before service delivery. A criminal might book a $5,000 first-class flight departing within 24 hours, knowing the legitimate cardholder will not discover the charge until after the service is consumed or resold.
Card Testing
Before major fraud attempts, criminals test stolen cards with small transactions like seat assignments or baggage fees, typically ranging from $5 to $25. Once validated, they proceed to larger bookings. Automated systems can test hundreds of cards in minutes, making pattern detection critical for merchants.
Refund Manipulation
This scheme exploits travel’s complex payment processes. Fraudsters make legitimate-looking bookings with stolen cards, then cancel to obtain refunds. Sophisticated operations involve multiple bookings with varying cancellation terms to exploit policy differences across platforms.
Chargeback Fraud (Friendly Fraud)
Seemingly legitimate customers dispute valid charges after receiving services. In travel, this often involves claims about cancellation fees or service quality. A customer might book a non-refundable hotel room, complete their stay, then claim they never stayed there to force a refund. The intangible nature of travel services makes these disputes particularly difficult to counter.
ARC Best Practices for Fraud Prevention
The Airlines Reporting Corporation recommends several practical measures to reduce exposure:
- Know your corporate clients’ travel patterns. Flag tickets with characteristics outside normal routes, timing, or booking behavior.
- Verify unusual booking details. Last-minute international tickets, one-way premium cabin purchases, and deviations from established travel profiles warrant additional scrutiny.
- add velocity checks. Multiple bookings from the same IP address or payment method in short timeframes often indicate automated card testing.
- Maintain detailed documentation. Comprehensive records of customer interactions, booking confirmations, and service delivery are essential for disputing illegitimate chargebacks.
Mitigation Strategies for Travel Merchants
Effective fraud prevention requires balancing security with customer experience. Excessive friction drives legitimate customers to competitors.
Layered authentication works better than binary approve-or-decline decisions. Risk-based authentication that triggers additional verification only for suspicious transactions maintains flow for trusted customers while catching high-risk bookings.
Real-time monitoring is non-negotiable. The speed of travel transactions, particularly same-day bookings, leaves no room for batch processing or delayed reviews.
Machine learning models trained on travel-specific patterns outperform generic fraud detection. The seasonality, route structures, and customer behaviors in travel differ significantly from retail or other sectors.
Chargeback representment capabilities matter. With 2.3% of transactions generating chargebacks, merchants need robust systems to contest illegitimate disputes and recover revenue.
Key Takeaways
- Travel payment fraud costs the industry $11.2 billion annually, with average fraudulent bookings reaching $1,500.
- Account takeover incidents increased 65% year-over-year, while chargebacks affect 2.3% of online travel transactions.
- Last-minute bookings, card testing, refund manipulation, and friendly fraud represent the primary threat vectors.
- ARC recommends pattern-based monitoring and knowing your customers’ typical travel behaviors.
- Balanced fraud prevention requires real-time, travel-specific risk assessment without adding excessive friction.
Merchants who treat fraud prevention as a strategic investment rather than a cost center will capture market share as competitors struggle with mounting losses. The tools exist. Implementation urgency separates winners from statistics.
