If you’ve ever questioned whether your travel planning fees actually make sense, you’re not alone. Most advisors are guessing. They’re looking at what others charge, picking a number that feels “about right,” and hoping it works. But the reality is, that approach almost always leads to burnout, inconsistent income, and a whole lot of second-guessing.
This episode dives into what happens when you stop guessing and start using real numbers to build your pricing. Because when you understand your business financially, everything changes, from how you show up in client conversations to how confident you feel charging your fees.
Why Most Travel Planning Fees Don’t Work
The biggest shift starts with flipping how you think about pricing. Instead of choosing a fee and hoping it supports your income goals, you start with the income you actually want to make and work backwards.
That means getting honest about how many trips you can realistically handle, how much time each one takes, and what your time is actually worth. Without that foundation, your pricing isn’t strategic, it’s just a guess.
What Time Tracking Actually Reveals
One of the most eye-opening parts of this process is tracking your time and not just the obvious parts like building itineraries.
It’s everything. Responding to inquiries, intake calls, follow-up emails, supplier communication, invoices, and pre-departure prep. All of those small tasks add up quickly.
When you see the full picture, you realize your pricing has to reflect more than just the visible work. It has to account for the entire experience you’re delivering.
Billable vs. Non-Billable Time
A powerful mindset shift is treating your time like a professional service.
Just like a lawyer or consultant, not every hour in your business is equal. Time spent working directly on a client’s trip should be profitable. If it’s not, your pricing structure needs to change.
Once you start thinking this way, it becomes much easier to evaluate whether your fees are actually supporting your business.
How To Calculate Travel Planning Fees
When you build your pricing based on real numbers, the process becomes much clearer.
You start by defining your income goal, what you actually want to take home, not just your sales target. Then you estimate how many trips you can realistically manage and track how long different types of trips require.
From there, you assign a value to your time and build pricing that reflects the complexity of each trip. Because a simple hotel booking is very different from a multi-country itinerary, and your fees should reflect that difference.
Raising Your Fees Without Losing Clients
One of the biggest fears advisors have is that raising their travel planning fees will scare clients away. But when fees are positioned correctly, that pushback often doesn’t happen.
Instead of simply announcing a price increase, the key is to communicate the value behind it. When clients understand what they’re getting and how it improves their experience, the conversation shifts.
It’s no longer about cost. It’s about value.
Confidence Changes Your Client Experience
When your pricing is grounded in real data, your confidence naturally increases.
You’re no longer hesitant or unsure. You’re leading the conversation with clarity and authority. And that confidence builds trust. Clients feel like they’re in good hands, which makes them far more likely to move forward.
Protecting Your Time and Profit
Even with strong pricing, profitability can disappear if you’re not protecting your time.
Unlimited calls, endless revisions, and long booking timelines can quickly eat into your margins. That’s why defining your process upfront is so important.
When clients know what’s included, how the process works, and where boundaries exist, it creates a smoother experience for everyone.
Why Transparency Attracts Better Clients
Transparency is one of the most effective ways to attract the right clients.
When you clearly communicate your fees, on your website, in your intake form, and throughout your process, you eliminate surprises. The right clients will see the value and move forward. The wrong ones will opt out early. And that’s a good thing.
Focus on Profitability, Not Sales
At the end of the day, this isn’t just about pricing, it’s about building a sustainable business.
Sales numbers don’t matter if you’re overworked and underpaid. What matters is profitability, consistency, and creating a business that actually supports your life.
If you’re still basing your fees on what others charge or what feels comfortable, this is your sign to pause and reassess. When you understand your numbers, everything becomes easier: your pricing, your packaging, your client conversations, and your growth.
If you’re ready to take that next step, the Seven Figure Sales framework walks you through exactly how to calculate your fees and build a business that truly works for you.





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