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Have you ever searched for flights , spotted a great deal, stepped away for a coffee, and returned to find the price mysteriously higher? You’re not imagining things—your browser could be the culprit. Web experts at Webpop Design explain that many travel and airline websites use small data files called cookies to quietly monitor your activity. These cookies track the routes you’ve searched for and how often you’ve checked them, influencing the prices you see. The more you keep checking the same flight, the more it signals your strong interest—and some websites use this as a reason to increase the price.
This isn’t a coincidence; it’s a strategic sales method called dynamic pricing.
In simple terms, the system interprets your repeated visits as a sig