Pricing is where most travel agencies leave the most money on the table. Strategic pricing can increase your revenue by 20–40% without adding a single new product or client.
The Foundation: Cost-Plus vs. Value-Based Pricing
Cost-plus pricing — calculating your costs and adding a fixed margin — is leaving money on the table. Value-based pricing starts from the opposite direction: what is this experience worth to the client?
We switched from 20% flat margins to value-based pricing and our average margin jumped from 22% to 38%. The key insight was that our premium tours could command much higher margins because clients weren't comparing them to commodity products.
— Thomas, DMC owner in Egypt
Seasonal Pricing: Stop Leaving Money on the Table
High season: Premium pricing with full margins — demand exceeds supply
Shoulder season: Standard pricing — good value proposition to fill capacity
Low season: Discounted pricing — lower margin but higher volume fills otherwise empty capacity
Key Info at a Glance
Optimal number of price tiers: 3–4 seasons, 3–4 group sizes
Healthy margin range: 25–45% for packaged tours, 15–25% for transfers
Price anchoring: Show your highest-tier price first to make standard prices seem reasonable
Group size economics: Solo travelers should pay 60–80% more per person than groups of 4+
Display strategy: Always show per-person pricing, always include the most popular tier as "recommended"
The Psychology of Price Presentation
Display three options — budget, standard, and premium — and most clients will choose the middle option. This is the "Goldilocks effect."
- Show prices per person, not total group prices
- Use price anchoring: display the premium option first
- Include a "Most Popular" badge on your preferred tier
- Break down what is included at each tier to justify the price difference
Insider Tip
Create a pricing spreadsheet that calculates margins automatically for every product, season, and group size combination. Update supplier costs at least twice a year.
Warning
Never compete on price with OTAs and aggregators. You cannot win a price war against Booking.com. Instead, compete on value, expertise, and service.