One of the most common questions we get is some version of “who did you actually book through?” and “is that platform legit?”. So here’s the honest answer: who we trust, who we’d be careful with, and what we actually used in Jordan. No fake five-star ratings, no “sponsored” recommendations dressed up as advice. If we’d hesitate to recommend it to a friend, it doesn’t go on this list.
A 1–5 trust score based on three things: how reliable bookings were in our experience, how clear pricing and refund policies are, and how easy it is to actually reach a human if something goes wrong. We’ve personally booked with everything scored 4 or 5 below.
Hotel Booking Platforms
| Platform | Trust score | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stay22 (what we use) | 5/5 | Comparing real prices across Booking, Expedia, Agoda in one click | Nothing material — it’s a price-comparison wrapper |
| Booking.com (direct) | 4/5 | Free-cancellation rates, large hotel inventory | Non-refundable rates — read the small print |
| Airbnb | 3/5 | Apartments & longer stays, off-the-grid stays in Wadi Rum | Cleaning & service fees double the headline price; host quality varies |
| Expedia | 3/5 | Bundling flight + hotel discounts | Customer support is slow when things go wrong |
| Direct hotel email | 4/5 | Negotiating multi-night stays, special requests | Response times vary; harder to dispute payment |
Tour Operators (Jordan-Specific)
| Operator type | Trust score | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Organised group tour | 3/5 | First-time travellers who don’t want to plan anything | Rushed schedules; little control over where you eat/stay |
| Local private driver | 5/5 | Inter-city transfers (Amman ↔ Petra ↔ Wadi Rum ↔ Dead Sea) | Agree the route, stops, and total price in writing before you start |
| Camp-organised desert tour | 5/5 | Wadi Rum jeep tours, stargazing — booked with the camp itself | Confirm the tour duration in writing; “3 hours” sometimes means 2 |
| Day tours via Petra hotels | 4/5 | Reliable transport to the Treasury & Monastery if you don’t want to plan logistics | Hotel takes a margin; you’d pay less booking direct |
Activities & Day Trips
| Activity platform | Trust score | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|
| GetYourGuide | 4/5 | Skip-the-line entries, reliable cancellation policy | Prices ~10–20% higher than booking direct on the ground |
| Viator | 3/5 | Niche tours, smaller group sizes | Customer service is the slowest of the three big platforms |
| Direct booking with camp/hotel | 5/5 | Desert tours, in-house activities — usually cheapest and most flexible | Pay on arrival when possible; avoid wire transfers |
| Local guide hired on the day | 3/5 | Petra — an official guide at the gate is worth it for the history | Stick to badge-holders inside Petra; ignore unsolicited offers outside |
What We Actually Used
Memories Aicha Luxury Camp (Wadi Rum), Hilton Dead Sea Resort & Spa (Dead Sea), and Mena Tyche Hotel Amman (Amman), all through Stay22, plus a private driver between regions. The cost side of all of this is in our trip cost breakdown.
Random “Jordan tour” promoters in Facebook groups who insist on full payment upfront via bank transfer, no website, no business registration, and no reviews outside their own page. Cheap doesn’t mean a deal — it usually means you’re the product, not the customer.
Common Questions
Why score Stay22 highest if it’s your partner?
Honest answer: because we’d use it regardless. Stay22 doesn’t sell you a room — it shows you the same room across Booking, Expedia, Agoda and others in one click so you can pick the best price. Our partnership pays us a small commission when you click through, but it doesn’t change your price or which platform you ultimately book with. If a different platform is cheaper for your dates, Stay22 will tell you and you should book there.
What if I find a cheaper price elsewhere?
Book the cheaper one. Seriously. We’re not in the business of pretending one platform is always best. Prices shift constantly — sometimes Booking is lower, sometimes Hotels.com runs a promo, sometimes the hotel’s own website beats both. Compare for your dates, not on principle.
How do I know an operator is legit before paying?
Five quick checks: (1) is there a real website with a registered business address; (2) can you find at least 20 independent reviews on Google, TripAdvisor or Booking that pre-date the past month; (3) are they willing to accept partial payment on arrival; (4) does the email reply come from a domain that matches the business name, not Gmail; (5) does the price feel suspiciously low compared to other operators? Two or more red flags and we’d walk away.
If you want the full picture of how this fits together: read our full Jordan story for the trip context, the cost breakdown for the real numbers, and mistakes to avoid for what we’d do differently next time.