Travel’s 50/50 Question: Book It Yourself or Using a Professional Travel Agent & Advisor?

SAN DIEGO, CA, May 15, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ — As travel industry leaders gathered at the recent Travel Leaders Network EDGE 2026 conference in San Diego to discuss the future of modern travel, one topic quietly continued surfacing in conversations among executives, advisors, and suppliers alike: in an increasingly digital world, are travelers beginning to rediscover the value of experienced human guidance?

That question — whether to book direct, plan independently, or work with a professional travel agent and advisor — is becoming what some industry leaders are calling the modern travel industry’s “50/50 question and how Ai Technology real customized searches come into play.

For years, the travel industry promised consumers that booking travel would eventually become almost completely self-service.

Search online. Compare prices. Click “book now.” Download an app. Handle everything yourself. And for many trips, that works just fine.

But as luxury travel has become more international, more expensive, and significantly more layered behind the scenes, many travelers are beginning to rediscover something they often did not realize they needed until much later in the process: experienced human guidance.

Not because travelers are incapable of booking online.

And not because technology failed.

But because modern luxury travel has quietly become far more operationally complicated than most consumers ever see from the outside.

Today’s luxury travel advisor often functions less like the old stereotype of a “travel agent” and more like a blend of:
• private client consultant
• destination specialist
• logistics coordinator
• luxury concierge
• travel advocate
• relationship manager

“Travel advising today is incredibly specialized,” says Lindsay Pearlman, President of Travel Leaders Network, one of North America’s largest travel advisor organizations.

Travel Leaders Network, often called TLN throughout the industry, supports more than 23,000 travel advisors across North America and has invested heavily in advisor profiling and matching systems designed to help travelers connect with specialists aligned with specific travel styles, destinations, cruise lines, and interests.

The shift reflects something much larger happening across the entire luxury travel industry.
Consumers no longer simply search for:
• “a travel agent”
• “someone who books cruises”
• “someone who can help with flights”

Instead, they increasingly look for:
• safari specialists
• Viking cruise experts
• Disney advisors
• expedition cruise consultants
• wellness travel planners
• luxury Europe specialists
• Antarctica experts
• river cruise advisors

The pattern mirrors what has already happened across nearly every major advisory profession.
Most people no longer simply search for:
• a doctor
• a lawyer
• a realtor
• a financial advisor

They search for specialists.

Travel, industry experts say, is evolving the same way.

Luxury Travel Is More Complicated Than It Looks

From the traveler’s perspective, a luxury vacation may appear seamless:
• elegant cruise suites
• private transfers
• luxury hotels
• curated excursions
• business-class flights
• personalized experiences

But experienced advisors say the amount of coordination happening quietly behind the scenes can be enormous.

A single luxury international trip may involve:
• passport timing requirements
• airline coordination
• supplier systems
• insurance timing
• payment schedules
• visa rules
• cruise enrollments
• transfer logistics
• cancellation windows
• extension planning
• airline schedule changes
• excursion timing

As AI and modern search tools make it easier for travelers to identify niche experts, the role of the travel advisor is also being redefined. Today’s top advisors are no longer simply booking beach resorts, or 7-day cruises, or placing routine reservations. Many are operating more like luxury lifestyle consultants — combining research, client relationship experience, marketing insight, logistics, and high-trust transaction skills to help travelers turn major travel goals into carefully coordinated experiences.

“On the luxury end of the market, travel advising has evolved far beyond booking a simple vacation,” says Heather Viking. “Many clients are choosing curated international experiences instead of second vacation homes, and the advisor’s role now requires the kind of precision, discretion, and trust once associated with luxury real estate. Earlier in my career, I worked with Sotheby’s in Tahoe at West Lake front billionaires’ row as locals called it, where eight-figure lakefront transactions were part of the landscape. Looking back, those transactions can feel like a walk in the park compared with coordinating complex international travel.”

“When everything works perfectly, travelers often never realize how much work happened behind the scenes,” Viking adds. “Experienced advisors may spend weeks helping travelers organize important details before they ever leave home.” says Heather Viking of Club Cruise, a top-producing luxury cruise advisor with a record breaking 700 verified five-star reviews. “But experienced advisors may spend weeks helping travelers organize details before they ever leave home but it so rewarding an of course the perks are the best!.”

And those details matter.

Luxury advisors say travelers often only fully appreciate the value of professional guidance after something unexpectedly goes wrong:
• a passport issue
• missed embarkation
• airline disruptions
• transfer failures
• supplier confusion
• improperly timed flights
• uncovered cancellations

“One thing traveler often underestimate is timing,” Viking explains. “Something as simple as a passport six-month prior rule expiration date mistake can completely deny boarding to an international itinerary if not reviewed early enough.”

Why Specialization Matters
One of the biggest misconceptions consumers still hold is believing every travel advisor essentially does the same thing.

Industry leaders say that could not be further from reality.

A quick beach vacation and a six-figure expedition voyage to Antarctica require completely different planning approaches.

Some advisors specialize in:
• Disney vacations
• Caribbean resorts
• luxury cruises
• expedition voyages
• African safaris
• culinary travel
• Viking river cruising
• wellness retreats
• family travel

Luxury travel advisor Angela Hughes, known for her Macato African safari expertise and decades of curated experiential luxury travel focus, says travelers should think carefully about finding the right match for the type of experience they are planning.

“A luxury safari, an expedition cruise, and a family theme park vacation all require very different planning styles,” Hughes explains. “Travelers should look for advisors whose experience genuinely aligns with the type of trip they are investing in.”

Industry colleagues and clients often refer to her as “the Safari Queen” because of her deep safari specialization developed over years of designing highly customized itineraries, combined with her personal travels to more than 120 countries while leading Trips and Ships Luxury Travel.

But that is where specialization in travel is learned and often goes deeper than many travelers realize.

Just as medicine includes cardiologists, orthopedic surgeons, and neurologists, luxury travel increasingly includes advisors who spend years immersed in highly specific corners of the industry:
• safaris
• river cruises
• expedition travel
• Disney
• luxury Europe
• world cruises
• destination weddings

“Travel today is too complex for anyone to truly be an expert in everything,” says Angela Hughes. “The best advisors usually go very deep into certain areas and spend years building relationships and experience there.”

Understanding the Difference Between an Advisor and an Agency
Another point of confusion for many travelers is understanding the difference between:
• a travel advisor
• a travel agent
• a travel agency

A travel advisor or agent may personally guide the traveler through the planning process.

But the agency itself is often the larger support structure operating quietly behind the scenes.

That agency may provide:
• accounting systems
• operational support
• supplier relationships
• air specialists
• emergency assistance
• escalation resources
• after-hours support
• technology systems

“A great advisor matters enormously,” Angela Hughes added. “I am also a CEO, CTC, and BYU professor, but none of those professional titles matter as much as being a travel agent and advisor first.

Travelers should also understand the support systems behind that advisor if complications arise.”

Hughes says that distinction becomes especially important during international travel.

“Many people can technically place a booking in another country,” Hughes explains. “But when complications arise internationally — airline disruptions, supplier issues, transfers, emergencies, changing regulations, political unrest, evacuations, or even the death of a traveler — that is when experienced advisors, professional credentials, and strong agency support become critically important.”

Hughes notes that many luxury agencies operate more like coordinated teams than individual sellers.

“There may be operations support, air specialists, accounting teams, destination partners, and supplier escalation contacts all quietly working behind the scenes while the traveler simply enjoys the experience,” she says.

The Cost Misunderstanding

One of the biggest misconceptions consumers still have about travel advisors involves cost.

In many cruise and luxury travel bookings, the traveler does not necessarily pay an added fee simply to work with the advisor. Advisors are often compensated through supplier commissions or referral structures already built into the supplier’s sales model.

That means travelers may receive:
• planning guidance
• supplier communication
• organizational help
• advocacy
• expertise
• ongoing support

Often at little or no additional direct cost compared with booking independently.

In some cases, experienced advisors and established agencies may also have access to:
• hosted experiences
• added amenities
• insider guidance
• preferred relationships
• travel invitations
• special support resources

The real value, industry professionals say, often comes down to:
• experience
• responsiveness
• specialization
• communication
• support systems
• planning structure

Technology Is Actually Helping Travelers Find Better Advisors

Ironically, many industry leaders say technology itself is now helping consumers rediscover expert advisors.

Search engines, reviews, YouTube, podcasts, social media, AI tools, and platforms like ChatGPT increasingly allow travelers to discover highly specialized advisors outside their local geographic markets.

Travel Leaders Network and parent company Internova Travel Group have continued investing in technology and advisor-matching systems designed to help connect travelers with advisors aligned with their specific travel goals.

“Across Internova and Travel Leaders Network, we are working every day to use better technology, data, and advisor intelligence to help connect travelers with the right travel professionals for the experiences they are planning,” says Pearlman. “The goal is not simply to find an advisor, but to help travelers find a strong match for their destination, travel style, supplier, and level of complexity.”

TLN President Pearlman believes that matching process is becoming increasingly important in luxury cruising.

“Travelers should not just ask whether someone can book the trip,” he says. “They should ask whether the advisor and agency truly understand that type of experience and the details that matter before and after booking.”

The Human Element Is Quietly Returning

Consumers still rely heavily on technology:
• supplier websites
• videos
• apps
• pricing tools
• online reviews
• AI search
• social media

But increasingly, luxury travelers ultimately want something technology alone often cannot fully provide:
• reassurance
• accountability
• preparation
• responsiveness
• expertise
• human judgment

“The best advisor relationships are collaborative,” Heather Viking further shares. “Travelers want communication, expertise, trust, and support. The process works best when both sides respect the value each brings.” She adds that, “the larger goal is not to make travel feel more complicated, but to help travelers enjoy it more fully.”

Together, these industry leaders point to a larger shift in travel: the future of professional advisors may become increasingly specialized, targeted, and experience-driven. For travelers, that means the question is not only whether to use an advisor, but how to find the right advisor whose expertise matches the destination, travel style, and level of support they need.

“As someone whose specialization proudly carries the Viking name, I know many travelers are simply trying to Explore the World in Comfort®,” says Heather Viking with a wink and a smile. “Choosing the right advisor helps protect that comfort, simplify the process, and give travelers greater confidence before they ever leave home.”

In an era increasingly shaped by automation and algorithms, experienced human guidance may be emerging as one of luxury travel’s most valuable amenities — and finding the right advisor may be well worth the journey.

About the Contributors:
Lindsay Pearlman, President of Travel Leaders Network®, leads one of the travel industry’s largest retail travel organizations, representing more than 5,700 travel agency locations across the United States and Canada and assisting millions of leisure and business travelers annually. Travel Leaders Network® is recognized as one of the industry’s largest sellers of luxury travel, cruises, and tours. Lead speaker of EDGE 2026 conference in the San Diego area brought together more than 2,200 attendees, including approximately 1,800 travel advisors, for education, networking, and industry leadership discussions.

Travel Leaders Network® and EDGE® are trademarks of their respective owners.

Angela Hughes is CEO of Trips and Ships Luxury Travel, specializing in Macato Luxury Safaris, curated travel operations, international travel support, and advisor development.

Heather Viking is a nationally recognized luxury travel advisor, 30-Under-30 Luxury Winner, Travel Personality and top-producing Viking cruise specialist focused on premium cruise and UHNW international travel experiences.

LEARN MORE:
Travel Leaders Network® Advisors
Travel Leaders Network Advisors
Trips and Ships Luxury Travel
Heather Viking

Written by Jay Scott reporting EDGE Conference – of Worldwide Halo, a PR and AI Media strategist focused on how AI search, AIO/GEO visibility, digital media, and emerging technologies are reshaping modern travel, luxury branding, and consumer engagement trends.


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