Yes. AirTreks tickets allow date changes on most segments for an airline change fee (typically $75-150 per flight). Adding or removing cities is possible but may require rebooking segments. Your consultant handles most changes.
Yes, and this is one of the advantages of booking with a human consultant rather than an algorithm. Life happens, plans shift, and your AirTreks consultant is there to help you adjust.
Before ticketing, changes are generally straightforward and often free. Want to add a stop, change a date, or swap one city for another? Your consultant reworks the routing and gives you an updated quote. This is the easiest window for changes, so take your time reviewing your itinerary before giving the green light to ticket.
After ticketing, changes are still possible but they depend on airline rules. Each airline on your itinerary has its own change policy, and fees typically range from $50 to $200 per segment. Some tickets are built on more flexible fare classes that allow changes with lower fees or no fees at all. Your consultant knows which legs of your trip have flexibility and which ones are locked in tight. Some Fare classes will cost more to change, others have more flexibility - trade offs exist.
Date changes are usually the simplest. Moving a flight from Tuesday to Thursday within the same week is often just a fee plus any fare difference. Route changes (swapping one city for another) are more complex because they affect the entire fare construction. Sometimes it's cheaper to leave the original segment in place and buy a separate ticket for the new routing.
If you need to cancel a leg entirely, the refund depends on the fare rules for that specific ticket. Some are refundable minus a fee. Others are non-refundable but the value can sometimes be applied to a future flight on the same airline.
The best advice: if you think a change might be coming, tell your consultant early. The sooner we know, the more options we have. And when you're in the planning phase, flag any dates or destinations you're uncertain about so we can build in flexibility where it matters most.