4 Travel Tools to Help You Eliminate the Travel Agent

Authorized Travel Agent

Thanks to the internet’s traveller-friendly websites, services, and business options, a number of holidayers and frequent travellers are choosing to bypass the standard agency booking route and plan their holidays independently. With a range of tools available, the time and financial advantages of a travel agent are disappearing, and occasionally even becoming hindrances.

Want to speed up your bookings, cut down on travel costs, and book a holiday that you’re responsible for? If you’re aiming to make your holiday more independent, these four tools will undoubtedly help:

    Expedia

Expedia is an all-purpose hotel, flight, and travel activity booking service. An international website, it can help you save money and cut down on annoyances when booking accommodation, finding location-based services, and securing airplane tickets for your next weekend or long-term getaway.

    Wikitravel

If Wikipedia launched an official travel industry spin-off, it’d likely resemble Wikitravel. A community wiki designed to provide travel information, inform tourists of potential scams and setbacks, and eliminate holiday concerns, Wikitravel is one of the best websites available for tourists looking for free, simple, and usable travel advice.

    Priceline

A US-only travel website backed up by science fiction’s most enduring presence, Priceline is a hotel and flight booking service that can help travellers secure some serious discounts and special deals. If you’re the risk-taking type, try securing cheap flights and hotels by negotiating with the company’s standard deals.

    Trip Advisor

Trip Advisor is one of the most well-known and widely used online travel review services. While lacking in features when compared to its booking-backed alternatives, it’s difficult to find a website that offers more honest travel opinions, unbiased reviews, and solid information. Before you make a booking at that unknown hotel, search Trip Advisor to ensure you’re not paying for a lemon.

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