Recently, a passenger booked a bus ticket to Phnom Penh through an OTA platform. Due to a technical issue, the order was never passed on to the operator. At departure time, the passenger showed up at the correct pickup point but no bus was waiting — simply because the provider's system had no record of the passenger's name. An unwanted situation, and one that is entirely avoidable.
Booking tickets and tours via OTAs (online travel agencies) is very convenient, but your order often passes through several layers of intermediaries before reaching the company that actually provides the service. Below are 7 tips to keep you from being "left behind" at the pickup point.
1. Proactively re-contact the local provider 24–48h in advance
This is the most important habit. After booking, message or call the company that directly provides the service (the bus operator, tour company) to reconfirm: the exact pickup time, pickup point, the service booked, the ticket/coach class, and what is and isn't included. A clear confirmation up front helps you spot early if your order hasn't reached its destination.
2. Read the terms carefully — the OTA may not have updated the new rules
Providers usually update their rules (departure times, pickup points, cancellation policy, baggage) first, while OTAs update afterwards, sometimes a few days late. Don't just trust the booking page — cross-check against the latest information from the provider itself.

3. Check payments carefully to avoid extra charges
When booking cross-border or through a foreign platform, confusion can arise over language, exchange rates and surcharges. Check the amount deducted, the currency, whether there are any surcharges, and keep your receipt. If something doesn't match, ask again right away before your trip.
4. Anticipate the traffic situation in each country
Every place is different. In Vietnam, traffic jams and heavy congestion can drag on, throwing off your schedule and affecting the next services. For routes through a border gate — for example, Mộc Bài – Bavet is usually open 07:00–18:00 — leave early and always allow buffer time; don't schedule things too tightly.
5. If problems arise: cooperate rather than threaten
When something goes wrong, don't be condescending or threaten with bad reviews, complaints, or reporting to the police. Travelers usually still end up bearing the brunt of the loss, and a tense attitude only makes things harder. Instead, boldly state what you want, propose solutions, and discuss in a spirit of cooperation — being decisive yet tactful will get you help faster.
6. Prepare your knowledge, don't trust blindly
Research the route, paperwork, customs and price levels in advance. Don't fully trust locals or even big OTA sites — verify information from a few sources yourself before you go.
7. Keep evidence and direct contact numbers
Save your confirmation email, booking code and invoice — these are your evidence in case of a dispute. Just as important: have the provider's direct contact number so you can call them right away when needed, rather than only being able to reach an OTA call center.
Book directly for instant confirmation
The surest way is to book directly with the operating company. At Go365 VietNam, your order enters the system immediately and you get direct confirmation. For example, the Saigon – Phnom Penh bus route: book in advance with a clear pickup point and departure time, plus on-the-spot support.
For advice on routes, pickup times or paperwork, call the hotline 0789 9000 77 for direct support.
