Travel | holiday travel 10 Travel Scams You Must Avoid Extra fees and useless 'deals' abound in travel business By Mark Russell Posted Nov 19, 2011 3:20 PM CST Copied Beware of travel scams, warns the Daily Beast. (Shutterstock) See 2 more photos Travel agencies and other travel organizations pull many schemes that are unethical without being illegal—so be wary. The Daily Beast presents 10 of the most common scams you should watch out for: Travel clubs. They can cost thousands of dollars, and give you little but a few discounts to some restaurants you'll never use. No thanks. Bogus car damage. When you return your rental car, the shady employee somehow finds some mystery damage to the underbelly of the car that costs just a bit less to fix than your insurance deductible. Resort fees. A common mandatory add-on to your supposedly low hotel rate, for towels or TV use or other nonsense. User-generated reviews. Yes, they're an Internet staple. But travel agencies, hotels, and restaurants have all gotten much savvier and sneakier at manipulating online reviews. You can read the full list in the Daily Beast. Read These Next Online sleuths expose Epstein file redactions. Rob and Michele Reiner died within a minute of each other. Sammy Davis Jr.'s ex, Swedish actor May Britt, is dead at 91. Sean Combs' team files appeal, argues he should be released. See 2 more photos Report an error