AI Travel Scams Are Getting Harder to Spot

Online travel fraud is changing as scammers adopt artificial intelligence tools. Fake booking websites, convincing emails and impersonated customer support are appearing more often. Researchers say the scale is already significant. Data published by McAfee in 2025 estimated losses linked to AI-driven travel scams at about $13 billion, with victims losing close to $1,000 on average.
Researchers say AI tools now make it easy to create fake travel websites. Many of these pages copy the look of airline, hotel or booking platforms and use realistic photos, reviews and descriptions. Cybersecurity analyst Rishika Desai explains that attackers often rely on simple website builders and free hosting services to publish large numbers of fraudulent sites within a short time.
“Scam artists create fake booking sites to look like real websites of either airlines, hotels, or booking platforms. Fueled by AI, these sites can be built quickly, populated with realistic photos and reviews, and deployed to target travelers at moments of urgency."
Common AI Travel Scams to Watch For
Cybersecurity researchers point to several scams that travellers encounter when booking trips online:
- Fake booking websites posing as airlines or hotels
- AI chatbots pretending to be airline support
- Emails confirming trips that were never booked
- Phone calls using AI-generated voices
- Fake reviews or entirely invented destinations
The goal is usually the same: to obtain personal data, loyalty account logins or credit-card details before victims realise the booking or message is fraudulent.
Many travel scams show up during last-minute bookings, flight delays or hurried searches for trips online. Limited-time offers, social media promotions and glowing travel reviews are commonly used to make a deal look legitimate. Some schemes go further: scammers advertise destinations that do not exist or circulate AI-generated guidebooks containing incorrect details about hotels, attractions and entire locations.
As artificial intelligence spreads across the internet, recognising suspicious offers becomes an important part of travel planning. Checking official websites, avoiding unknown links and verifying bookings directly through airlines or hotels can help prevent fraud. Careful verification remains one of the simplest ways to avoid costly mistakes while arranging flights, accommodation or tours online.



















