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The single most expensive assumption in villa rental is that you can cancel and get your money back. In the EU, the 14-day right of withdrawal that covers most online purchases specifically does not apply to accommodation booked for set dates, under the Consumer Rights Directive 2011/83/EU. In the US, there is no general statutory refund right for a vacation rental at all, and the contract you signed governs almost everything. That means your cancellation rights are not a matter of consumer law you can fall back on, they are whatever the cancellation clause in your contract says, and those clauses are usually tiered, strict, and written to protect the owner. Six things decide what you actually recover.
This is the page where the contract you skimmed becomes the only thing that matters. Cancellation rights vary by where the villa sits, by the platform you booked through, and by whether you bought insurance, but the constant across almost every jurisdiction is the same: read the clause before you sign, because no law is coming to rescue a late cancellation. None of this is legal advice, and a specific dispute may turn on local rules, but the framework below is where to start.
EU cooling-offNot for set-date stays
US statutory refundNone, contract governs
What decides itThe cancellation clause
Best protectionInsurance, bought early
Last updated2026-05