Bokun vs FareHarbor: Which Booking Software Should You Choose in 2026?
Deciding between Bokun and FareHarbor in 2026? I break down the fee structures, distribution networks, and the 'hidden' costs of both platforms.
Booking software is the nervous system of your tour business; choose the wrong one, and you’re either bleeding margins or handcuffed by a prehistoric interface. In 2026, the debate between Bokun and FareHarbor isn't about which has more "features"—it’s about which ecosystem aligns with your specific distribution strategy and cost structure.
I’ve scaled my own operations to over $10M in revenue, and I can tell you that 99% of operators look at these platforms the wrong way. They look at the bells and whistles. I look at the unit economics and how much friction the software creates between a guest's credit card and my bank account.
The Margin Trap: Understanding the True Cost
Most operators get blinded by the "subscription fee" or lack thereof. In 2026, both Bokun and FareHarbor have evolved their pricing models to capture a slice of your success.
FareHarbor famously popularized the "free for the operator" model, where they tack a convenience fee onto the consumer’s total. On the surface, it’s great—your software cost is effectively zero. However, in a price-sensitive market, that 6% fee can be the difference between a conversion and a bounce. If you are selling a $200 excursion, your guest is paying an extra $12 just for the privilege of checking out.
Bokun, owned by TripAdvisor/Viator, takes a different approach. They typically offer a low monthly subscription fee (around $49/month for the Pro plan) but charge a 1.5% - 2% booking fee on direct reservations. If you are doing $1M in direct sales, that’s $15,000–$20,000 a year in fees.
The Reality Check:
- FareHarbor is better for cash-strapped startups that don't want a fixed monthly overhead.
- Bokun is often cheaper for high-volume operators who have strong direct-to-consumer (DTC) marketing and want to avoid high percentage-based "convenience fees" that might annoy luxury or repeat clients.
The Distribution Ecosystem: API vs. Connectivity
In 2026, your booking software is your bridge to OTAs (Online Travel Agencies). This is where the two platforms diverge sharply in philosophy.
Since Bokun is a TripAdvisor company, the integration with Viator is seamless. Many features—like real-time availability updates and instant booking confirmations—are "native." If your business model relies 80% on Viator, Bokun is built for you. It simplifies the back-end management of those listings significantly.
FareHarbor, however, remains the "Swiss Army Knife" of distribution. They have built an incredibly robust network called the FareHarbor Distribution Network. It allows you to partner with local hotels, other operators, and niche OTAs without the friction of manual booking entries.
Key differences in distribution: 1. OTAs: Bokun has the "home field advantage" with Viator; FareHarbor maintains a neutral ground with excellent connections across the board. 2. Resellers: FareHarbor’s internal reseller network is more intuitive for local B2B partnerships. 3. Marketplace: Bokun allows you to "contract" with other operators directly within the platform to sell their tours for a commission, though the interface can be clunky.
User Experience and Site Speed: The Hidden Conversion Killers
I built my business on organic traffic. When you work that hard for a lead, you cannot afford for your booking widget to take three seconds to load.
FareHarbor’s checkout flow remains the gold standard for "slickness." It is mobile-first, requires minimal clicks, and feels premium. They also offer a "FareHarbor Sites" service where they build your website for you. While I generally advise against letting your booking software own your website (it makes switching extremely difficult), their sites are fast and conversion-optimized.
Bokun has improved significantly, but its widgets still occasionally feel like a plugin bolted onto a site rather than a native part of the experience. Their "Website Builder" is functional but often lacks the sophisticated design aesthetic required for high-end boutique tours.
Tech Support: Partner or Software Provider?
This is where the two companies have fundamentally different cultures.
FareHarbor operates as a "partnership" model. When you sign up, you get an account manager. They will help you set up your items, optimize your descriptions, and even give you advice on pricing. For an operator scaling from $100k to $500k, this "free" consultancy is gold.
Bokun is more of a self-service utility. You get the tools, and you are expected to know how to use them. Their support has improved, but you won't get a dedicated strategist calling you to check on your conversion rates. You’re paying less in fees, so you get less "hand-holding."
Choosing Based on Your Growth Stage
There is no "best" software, only the software that fits your current P&L and future goals. I break it down like this:
You should choose FareHarbor if:
- You are a new operator and want a professional setup without upfront costs.
- You want a dedicated account manager to assist with technical setup.
- Local B2B partnerships (hotels, concierges) are a core part of your strategy.
- You want the highest possible conversion rate on mobile devices.
- You are a high-volume operator and the 6% consumer fee is starting to hurt your bookings.
- Viator is your primary source of leads and you want a "native" experience.
- You have a dedicated staff member (or are tech-savvy yourself) to manage the back-end settings.
- You prefer a predictable monthly SaaS fee over variable transaction fees.
The "Gonzalo" Hierarchy of Booking Software
When I evaluate these tools for my own operations or for the people I advise, I use a specific checklist. If a tool fails more than two of these, I move on:
- API Openness: Can I pull my data out easily to use in a custom CRM or reporting tool?
- Load Time: Does the booking overlay add more than 500ms to my page load speed?
- Mobile Checkout: Can I complete a booking in under 45 seconds using only one thumb?
- Refund Management: Can my staff process a complex refund or reschedule in under three clicks?
- Up-sell Capability: Can I offer a private upgrade or a merchandise add-on within the checkout flow?
What I’d Do Next
If you’re stuck between these two, stop looking at the feature lists. Both can book a tour. Both can send an email confirmation. Both can take a credit card.
Instead, look at your last 12 months of data. Calculate exactly how much you would have paid in "convenience fees" with FareHarbor versus "booking fees and subscriptions" with Bokun. Let the math make the first cut. Then, look at your distribution—if you are 90% direct-organic, the fee structure matters most. If you are 90% OTA, the integration depth matters most.
Software won't fix a bad tour, but it will definitely break a good one. If you’re doing over $500k in revenue and your software feels like it’s holding you back from hitting that $5M or $10M mark, let’s look at your tech stack and distribution together.