A good US travel agency should be IATAN-certified, answer the phone 24/7 with US-based agents, disclose all fees before payment, and offer to compare multiple carriers in one call.
"Travel agency" can mean a one-person Instagram operation or a 500-agent call center. Knowing the difference saves you hundreds — and sometimes saves your trip.
1. Industry Credentials That Actually Matter
- IATAN (International Airlines Travel Agent Network) — the US accreditation that lets agencies ticket directly on most airlines. Always ask if the agency is IATAN-accredited.
- ARC (Airlines Reporting Corporation) — the financial clearinghouse for US airline ticket sales. ARC-accredited agencies have a bond and are vetted.
- CLIA (Cruise Lines International Association) — for cruise specialists.
- USTOA (US Tour Operators Association) — for tour and packaged-travel operators.
2. Hours and Where the Agents Actually Sit
Travel happens 24/7. So should your agency's phone line. Ask:
- "Are your agents US-based or overseas?"
- "What's your average hold time at 2 AM?"
- "If my flight cancels at midnight, can someone rebook me?"
3. Transparent Fee Disclosure
A reputable agency will quote a single total (fare + taxes + service fee) before processing payment. Walk away from any agency that:
- Won't tell you the service fee until you commit
- Adds line items at checkout that weren't quoted
- Refuses to email you a written quote before payment
4. Multi-Carrier Search Capability
Ask: "Can you search across multiple airlines for my route?" Some agencies are essentially extensions of a single airline (cheap travel-agent appointments for that one carrier). A real agency uses GDS systems (Sabre, Amadeus, Galileo) that pull from all major carriers simultaneously.
5. Specialization vs Full-Service
Decide what you need:
- Full-service agency (like us) — books flights, hotels, cruises, rail, cars in one call
- Cruise specialist — knows individual ship layouts and the right time to book each line's promos
- Corporate travel manager — for businesses with regular travel needs
- Luxury travel advisor — for Four Seasons / Aman / private aviation
6. Reviews — Read Critically
Check Google reviews, Trustpilot, BBB. Ignore 5-star reviews with no detail. Look for specific stories: "rebooked me at 2 AM during a Delta meltdown" tells you more than "great service!"
7. The 5 Questions to Ask Before You Book
- "What's your IATAN/ARC number?"
- "What's your total fee for this booking?"
- "What's the change/cancel policy on this specific fare?"
- "Will I get loyalty miles credited?"
- "What happens if there's a disruption?"
If any answer feels vague, find another agency.