Every booking that comes through Viator, GetYourGuide or an OTA at 20–25% commission is a booking you part-own. Reducing that dependency is one of the highest-leverage moves a tour operator can make — and it's entirely achievable with the right marketing system.
Why is OTA commission such a problem for tour operators?
The same booking: through an OTA vs taken direct
| Through an OTA | Taken direct | |
|---|---|---|
| Commission per booking | 20–25% of revenue, every time | None — you fund your own marketing instead |
| Customer relationship | The OTA owns it | You own it |
| Customer data & email | The OTA keeps it | You capture it |
| How you’re shown | A generic marketplace listing | Your full experience, presented your way |
| Repeat bookings | Commission charged again | Free to re-market and rebook |
How can tour operators win more direct bookings?
Three ways to win more direct bookings
| Channel | What it does | The payoff |
|---|---|---|
| Google Ads | Puts you in front of booking-intent searches — often before the traveller reaches an OTA | Captures demand that already exists, right now |
| SEO | Ranks your own pages for the experience-specific queries OTAs don’t dominate | Commission-free demand that compounds over time |
| Own the relationship | Captures the guest’s email on every direct booking | Repeat bookings, referrals and lifetime value |
Capture booking intent with Google Ads
Travellers searching for your specific type of experience are ready to book. Google Ads puts you in front of them at that moment — often before they reach an OTA listing.
Build commission-free demand with SEO
SEO ranks your own pages for the long-tail, experience-specific queries OTAs don't dominate, earning bookings that cost no commission in perpetuity.
Own the customer relationship
Direct bookings give you the email address. That means repeat bookings, referrals and lifetime value the OTA captures instead when the booking goes through them.
Does this mean leaving the OTAs entirely?
A balanced travel marketing strategy uses the OTAs for what they're good at while systematically building the direct channel alongside.
Frequently asked questions
How much commission do OTAs charge tour operators?
Major OTAs typically charge tour operators and activity providers 20–25% commission per booking, sometimes more. This comes off the top of every booking and, combined with the loss of customer data and direct relationship, makes OTA-dependent operators significantly less profitable than those with a strong direct-booking channel.
Is it realistic to replace OTA bookings with direct ones?
It's realistic to shift the balance substantially over time, though most operators keep some OTA presence for discovery. With paid search capturing booking intent, SEO building organic visibility, and email capturing past guests, operators can grow direct bookings into the majority of revenue — cutting blended commission and improving margins.
What's the fastest way to start reducing OTA dependency?
The fastest start is usually Google Ads targeting your booking-intent keywords, paired with accurate conversion tracking so you can prove direct-booking profitability. This captures travellers at the moment of intent. SEO and email then build the durable, commission-free demand that reduces OTA reliance over the longer term.
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