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How Travel Agents Charge Service Fees in 2026

Hudson Valeriano · Founder, TravelForza · May 15, 2026 · 6 min read

Service fees are how solo agents survive flight-only bookings (zero commission). Here's the 2026 playbook on when to charge, how much, and how to introduce it without losing clients.

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Table of contents
1. Why service fees exist 2. When to charge a service fee 3. 2026 service fee benchmarks 4. How to introduce a service fee without losing the client 5. How to collect the fee

Why service fees exist

In 2003, commercial airlines killed travel agent commission. The agencies that survived added "service fees" — charges the client pays you directly, separate from the airline ticket. Without these, flight-only bookings would be unpaid labor.

When to charge a service fee

2026 service fee benchmarks

ScenarioTypical fee
Domestic flight only (per pax)$25-50
International flight only (per pax)$50-100
Award/miles redemption$75-200
Visa application research$25-50
Trip change after departure$50-150

How to introduce a service fee without losing the client

The script: "Just so you know — for flight-only bookings I charge a $50 service fee (per ticket) since airlines stopped paying commission years ago. This covers the search, booking, ticketing, and any changes during the trip. For full vacation packages I don't charge anything extra — the commission from hotels/cruises pays for my time."

This frames the fee as fairness (you stopped getting paid by airlines), scoped (only flights, not vacations), and value-bundled (changes during trip included). 90% of clients accept this without question.

How to collect the fee

TravelForza's payment links work for service fees. Send the Stripe/Square link via WhatsApp: "Hi! Here's the link for the $50 service fee for the JFK→GRU ticket. I'll have the ticket emailed within 24h after payment."

Collect fees as easily as commission

TravelForza sends payment links via WhatsApp. Service fees become as smooth as bookings.

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FAQ

Do clients resent service fees?

Not when framed as "this covers what airlines stopped paying." 90% of clients accept the $50 flight booking fee without pushback. The 10% who do push back are usually price-shoppers you don't want as long-term clients anyway.

Are service fees taxable?

Yes. Service fees are direct income — fully taxable as ordinary business income. Track them separately in your accounting since they don't go through host agency split.