How we check listings
We deliberately don’t say “verified.” Scammers imitate that word — some fake pages have even gotten official-looking badges. Instead, every listing carries one of five plain labels and the date we last checked it, so you can judge for yourself.
The five trust labels
We manually checked at least one official contact path — a phone number, an official page, or a website — and it matched the business on the date shown.
The business itself submitted or reconfirmed its details with us. It’s a direct signal from the owner — still not a guarantee, but a clear, honest one.
We reviewed this listing on the date shown. Recency matters here — prices and contacts change, so a recent check means the details are more likely to still be right.
Some time has passed since our last check, so a few details may be outdated. Treat it carefully and confirm the contact yourself before you pay.
Someone reported a concern about this listing and it’s under manual review. We show this openly so you can be extra careful while we look into it.
What a check actually involves
- We find the official contact path and confirm the details line up across sources.
- We note the price range from what the business actually shows travelers.
- We stamp the date so you always see how fresh the information is.
- When a report comes in, a person reviews it before anything changes — nothing is automatic.
“Checked” means we reviewed the contact path and/or details on the date shown. It is not a guarantee, an escrow service, or a booking service. We don’t hold your money and we can’t promise an outcome. Always do your own quick check before you pay — our scam-safe steps take two minutes.
See something that looks off? Tell us — every report is reviewed by hand, and we never publish accusations.
Report a suspicious page