Starting a travel agency in the US in 2026 takes more than a passion for travel — it requires understanding business registration, state-level licensing, accreditation options, supplier relationships, and the technology stack you’ll book on. This guide walks through the full process from business formation to your first booking.
Step 1: Choose Your Business Model
Before registering anything, decide how you’ll operate:
- Independent agency — full control, but you handle accreditation, supplier relationships, and compliance yourself.
- Host agency affiliate — operate under an established host’s ARC/IATAN accreditation and supplier agreements in exchange for a commission split, with lower upfront cost and complexity.
- Franchise — buy into an established brand and support system, with less flexibility but more built-in structure.
Step 2: Register Your Business
Form your legal entity (LLC is the most common choice for small agencies due to liability protection), obtain an IRS Employer Identification Number, and register with your state’s Secretary of State office. If you’ll be selling to residents of California, Florida, Washington, Hawaii, or Iowa, check whether you need to register under that state’s Seller of Travel statute regardless of where your business itself is based.
Step 3: Decide on Accreditation
If you plan to issue airline tickets independently, you’ll eventually need ARC accreditation, which requires a financial bond, a certified ARC Specialist on staff, and a formal application process. Many new agencies start under a host agency’s existing accreditation instead, then pursue their own ARC number once booking volume justifies the investment. See our full ARC accreditation guide for the step-by-step process.
Step 4: Set Up Insurance and Bonding
Beyond any state-mandated bonds, most agencies carry general liability insurance and errors & omissions (E&O) insurance to protect against claims related to booking mistakes or supplier failures.
Step 5: Choose Your Booking Technology
Your booking platform is the operational backbone of your agency. Look for a system that gives you GDS connectivity for flights, hotel and package content through reliable bed bank partners, secure multi-currency payment processing, and — if you plan to build an agent network — sub-agent management tools from day one rather than something you’ll need to migrate to later. SoftCloud IBE is built specifically for agencies at this stage, with white-label branding and direct connections to Travelport, Sabre, Stuba, and TBO.
Step 6: Build Supplier Relationships
Beyond your GDS and bed bank connections, build direct relationships with tour operators, DMCs, and niche suppliers relevant to your specialty — these relationships often unlock better rates and support than booking engine content alone.
Step 7: Define Your Niche
The most successful new agencies rarely try to serve everyone. Specializing — whether by destination, traveler type (luxury, corporate, group), or audience (such as diaspora travel between the US and specific countries) — makes marketing, supplier negotiation, and word-of-mouth growth significantly more effective than competing as a generalist.
Step 8: Launch and Market
With your entity, accreditation path, insurance, and booking platform in place, focus your initial marketing on the niche and supplier relationships that differentiate you — referral networks, content marketing around your specialty, and direct outreach to your target traveler segment typically outperform broad paid advertising for a new agency’s first bookings.
Common Mistakes New Agencies Make
- Skipping state-level compliance research — assuming your home state’s rules are all that apply.
- Choosing booking technology that can’t scale — forcing a costly platform migration once you start adding sub-agents.
- Trying to serve every destination and traveler type — diluting marketing effort and supplier leverage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need ARC accreditation to start a travel agency?
No — many new agencies start by booking through a host agency’s existing accreditation and pursue their own ARC number later, once their air ticketing volume justifies the bonding and application investment.
How much does it cost to start a travel agency in the US?
Costs vary widely based on your business model. A host-agency-affiliated independent agent can start with relatively low upfront cost, while an independent agency pursuing its own ARC accreditation and booking platform should budget for entity formation, insurance, bonding, and technology licensing — confirm current figures with your state and chosen providers.
What’s the fastest way to start booking clients?
Affiliating with a host agency is typically the fastest route, since it gives you immediate access to an existing ARC/IATAN accreditation, supplier agreements, and often a ready-to-use booking platform.
Final Thoughts
Starting a travel agency in the US is a multi-step process spanning legal formation, accreditation decisions, compliance, and technology — but none of it is a one-way door. Most successful agencies start lean (often under a host agency) and build toward independent accreditation and a dedicated booking platform as their business grows.
Ready to see how SoftCloud Tec supports new agencies with GDS connectivity and white-label booking? Get in touch or view our pricing plans.