---
title: "Group Travel Packages India 2026: How Travel Agents Price, Sell and Profit from Groups"
description: "Learn how Indian travel agents price group travel packages for 20-35% margin. Includes a worked Thailand example generating Rs 1,45,600 net from one group booking."
url: https://www.flyo.ai/en/blog/group-travel-packages-india-2026
publishedAt: 2026-05-31
author: "Utpal Ravi"
readTime: "10 min read"
tags: ["Group Travel", "Travel Agent India", "Group Packages India", "Group Booking Commission", "Corporate Travel", "Pilgrimage Tours"]
---

# Group Travel Packages India 2026: How Travel Agents Price, Sell and Profit from Groups

> Learn how Indian travel agents price group travel packages for 20-35% margin. Includes a worked Thailand example generating Rs 1,45,600 net from one group booking.

*A single group booking of 20 people can generate more commission than 40 individual bookings combined. The maths is straightforward: higher volume per transaction, better wholesale rates, and a client who hands you every decision rather than shopping around. Yet most small Indian travel agents treat group travel as something large agencies do. It is not. It is the fastest way a 1-3 person agency doubles its income without doubling its workload.*

---

Group travel is the most underused revenue opportunity in small Indian travel agencies. The reasons agents avoid it are almost always the same: it feels complicated, the coordination seems like more work, and the assumption is that groups only go to pilgrimage sites or corporate offsites. None of this is accurate once you understand how group bookings actually work.

This guide covers how to price group packages for strong margin, where to find group clients, how to handle the coordination without it consuming your week, and where the real money is.

---

## Why Group Travel Pays More Than Individual Bookings

The economics of group travel are fundamentally different from individual bookings, and they favour the agent at every stage.

**Airline group fares:** Every major airline operates a separate group desk for bookings of 10 or more passengers. Group fares are negotiated separately from published fares and typically come with advantages that individual bookings cannot match: fixed pricing regardless of demand fluctuation, free seats (typically one free seat per 10-15 passengers paid), flexible name change policies up to 72 hours before departure, and no ticketing deadline pressure. [IndiGo](https://www.goindigo.in), [Air India](https://www.airindia.com), [Emirates](https://www.emirates.com), and [Qatar Airways](https://www.qatarairways.com) all operate dedicated group desks. A 20-person group to Dubai on Air India through the group desk gives the agent pricing certainty and a free seat that can be used for the group leader or converted to margin.

**Hotel group rates:** Hotels negotiate group rates separately from rack rates. A 4-star hotel in Bali with a rack rate of Rs 8,000 per night will offer a group rate of Rs 5,500-6,500 per night for a block of 15 rooms or more. That gap - Rs 1,500-2,500 per room per night - is the agent margin layer before any wholesale bed bank markup. On a 15-room group staying 5 nights, that is Rs 11,250-18,750 in margin from hotel pricing alone.

**Package margin stacks up:** A 20-person group trip to Thailand for 7 nights generates commission from: flights (group fare margin or free seat), hotel (group rate vs retail), transfers (volume discount from ground handler), travel insurance (40-50% commission on 20 policies), and eSIM (commission on 20 units). Total margin on a well-assembled Rs 35,000 per person Thailand group package is Rs 7,000-12,000 per person. On 20 people, that is Rs 1,40,000-2,40,000 per booking.

---

## The Five Most Profitable Group Travel Segments for Indian Agents

Not all group travel is equally profitable or equally easy to sell. Here are the five segments where Indian travel agents consistently build strong group business.

### 1. Corporate Offsites and Team Trips

Companies send teams on annual offsites, incentive trips, and team building travel. This is recurring business - the same company books every year. Corporate group travel to Goa, Coorg, Mussoorie, or international destinations like Thailand and Bali is the most predictable group revenue stream for agents who secure even 3-4 corporate accounts.

Margins on corporate group packages: Rs 5,000-15,000 per person depending on destination and budget. A 25-person corporate offsite to Coorg at Rs 25,000 per person generates Rs 1,25,000-3,75,000 in margin per booking. The company pays on invoice, there are no last-minute payment issues, and the booker is one decision-maker - not 25 people with 25 opinions.

**How to get corporate group clients:** The most effective approach is to approach HR managers and admin heads directly, not the travel desk. Offer to handle the entire coordination - hotel, transport, activities, meals, invoicing - so they do not have to manage 25 people's preferences. That turnkey service is the reason a company pays an agent rather than booking MakeMyTrip for everyone.

### 2. Wedding Groups and Pre-Wedding Travel

Indian weddings routinely involve 50-200 guests travelling from different cities to a destination. The wedding couple books a venue; the travel agent can capture every guest's flight and hotel booking by positioning themselves as the official wedding travel coordinator.

The approach: approach wedding planners, banquet managers at premium hotels, and bridal boutiques. Offer to handle the guest travel logistics as a service the planner can recommend. The commission comes from the volume of individual bookings rather than a single group contract, but the referral is the same.

Pre-wedding trips - bachelorette getaways, bachelor trips, family pre-wedding holidays - are a smaller but extremely high-margin category. A 12-person bachelorette trip to Phuket or Bali is a group booking where the client group is emotionally engaged, budget is secondary to experience, and every add-on sells easily.

### 3. Pilgrimage and Religious Group Travel

India has a massive, year-round pilgrimage travel market. Char Dham, Vaishno Devi, Tirupati, Shirdi, Ajmer - domestic pilgrimage groups range from 15 to 200 people. Hajj and Umrah groups for Muslim travellers, and Kailash Mansarovar for Hindu pilgrims, are international pilgrimage segments with significant package value.

Pilgrimage groups have high repeat rates (the same group leader brings a new batch every year), strong referral networks within communities, and clients who prioritise reliability and safety over price. An agent who establishes a reputation for smooth pilgrimage coordination builds a client base that stays for decades.

### 4. School and College Educational Trips

Schools plan annual excursions and study tours. Colleges run cultural exchange trips and educational visits. These are low per-person margin bookings (budgets are tight and scrutinised), but volume is high and the relationship with the institution generates a repeat booking every academic year.

The real value of educational group business is not the margin per trip - it is the parent relationships. Every parent whose child has a smooth school trip knows exactly who the travel agent is. Some of those parents become individual clients for family holidays and international trips.

### 5. Interest and Hobby Groups

Photography tours, birding tours, trekking groups, cycling trips, yoga retreats - interest-based group travel is a growing segment in India. These groups are small (8-20 people) but have high per-person spend because the destination and experience quality matters enormously to them.

An agent who positions themselves in one interest community - say, birding travel through BNHS connections, or photography travel through camera club networks - builds a highly loyal group client base that generates multiple trips per year.

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## How to Price a Group Package Without Undercharging

The most common mistake in group pricing is applying a flat markup to the cost without accounting for the complexity premium the agent deserves.

A group package has three pricing layers:

**Layer 1 - Supplier cost:** What you pay for flights, hotel, transfers, and ground services at group rates.

**Layer 2 - Agent margin:** The difference between your supplier cost and the client price. For group packages, this should be 20-35% of the total package cost, not 10-15%. The coordination, risk, and expertise of managing 20 people's travel justifies a higher margin than an individual booking.

**Layer 3 - Group leader fee or complimentary inclusion:** On groups of 15 or more, standard industry practice is to include the group leader's travel at no cost (funded from the margin across the group). If the group leader pays their own way, this becomes additional margin.

**A worked example - 20-person Thailand group:**

| Component | Per Person Cost | Per Person Price | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Return flights (group fare) | Rs 18,000 | Rs 21,000 | Rs 3,000 |
| Hotel (7 nights, group rate) | Rs 9,000 | Rs 12,000 | Rs 3,000 |
| Transfers and ground | Rs 2,500 | Rs 3,500 | Rs 1,000 |
| Experiences (2 included) | Rs 2,000 | Rs 3,000 | Rs 1,000 |
| Travel insurance | Rs 900 | Rs 1,800 | Rs 900 |
| **Total** | **Rs 32,400** | **Rs 41,300** | **Rs 8,900** |

On 20 paying passengers: Rs 1,78,000 in margin. Group leader travels free (costing Rs 32,400 from the margin). Net margin: Rs 1,45,600 from one booking.

Never present a per-person itemised cost breakdown to the group. Present a total per-person package price. The moment clients see line items they start comparing individual components on OTAs and the conversation becomes a negotiation rather than a booking.

---

## The Coordination Problem - and How to Solve It

The reason most agents avoid groups is the coordination. Twenty people means twenty sets of preferences, payment schedules, dietary requirements, and last-minute changes. This is real - but it is manageable with the right structure.

**Appoint a group coordinator from within the group.** One person - the trip leader, the HR manager, the teacher - is your single point of contact. All communication goes through them. They collect payments, consolidate dietary preferences, and manage internal group decisions. You manage the suppliers. This one rule eliminates 80% of the coordination burden.

**Set a firm payment schedule with a non-refundable deposit.** A 25% non-refundable deposit at booking, 50% at 60 days before travel, and 25% balance at 30 days before travel. Groups that do not commit financially are groups that fall apart. A deposit structure separates serious groups from enquiries.

**Use WhatsApp Business for group communication, not a personal group chat.** Create a dedicated WhatsApp group for the trip with the agent as admin. Post updates there - confirmation documents, itinerary, pre-trip checklist. This manages client expectations and reduces individual messages to your personal number.

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## Where to Find Group Clients

Groups do not typically come to agents through Google search. They come through relationships and positioning. Three channels that consistently generate group business:

**Community relationships:** Religious communities, alumni networks, professional associations, and hobby clubs all take group trips. Being known within one community as the go-to travel coordinator is worth more than any digital advertisement.

**Corporate HR and admin networks:** Every company with more than 50 employees has an HR manager who dreads organising the annual offsite. Reach that person directly - a cold message offering to handle the entire coordination, one invoice, no headaches - and you are solving their biggest pain point.

**Existing clients who are group leaders:** Your current individual clients often lead or influence group travel decisions. A WhatsApp message to your top 50 clients saying "I now handle group travel - if you are planning a group trip with family, friends, or your company, I would love to handle it" will generate enquiries from people who already trust you.

For agents building a full client acquisition strategy, see [How to Get Clients as a Travel Agent in India 2026](/en/blog/how-to-get-clients-travel-agent-india-2026).

---

## Post-Booking Revenue on Group Bookings

Group bookings generate ancillary commission at scale. Twenty people buying travel insurance at Rs 900 commission each is Rs 18,000 from one booking with zero additional effort after the group rate is agreed. Twenty people buying eSIM before an international trip is Rs 2,000-6,000 in additional commission.

Platforms like [flyo.ai](https://flyo.ai) automate these offers after a booking is confirmed - each traveller in the group receives a personalised Smart Ticket with offers for insurance, eSIM, and lounge access relevant to their destination. The agent earns commission on every purchase without tracking 20 individual conversations. For a 20-person international group, this can add Rs 15,000-35,000 in ancillary commission on top of the package margin.

For the full breakdown of what each ancillary product pays, see [Travel Agent Commission Rates India 2026](/en/blog/travel-agent-commission-india-2026).

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## Frequently Asked Questions

<div itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/FAQPage">

<details itemscope itemprop="mainEntity" itemtype="https://schema.org/Question">
<summary itemprop="name"><strong>How much commission do travel agents earn on group packages in India?</strong></summary>
<div itemprop="acceptedAnswer" itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/Answer">
<div itemprop="text">
Travel agents in India typically earn 20-35% margin on group travel packages. On a Rs 40,000 per person group package to Thailand for 20 people, the agent earns Rs 8,000-14,000 per person, or Rs 1,60,000-2,80,000 total. This margin comes from the difference between group airline fares (which include free seats for the group leader), hotel group rates (typically 20-35% below rack rate), wholesale transfer pricing, and ancillary commissions on travel insurance (40-50% of premium) and eSIM for each traveller.
</div>
</div>
</details>

<details itemscope itemprop="mainEntity" itemtype="https://schema.org/Question">
<summary itemprop="name"><strong>What is the minimum group size for airline group fares in India?</strong></summary>
<div itemprop="acceptedAnswer" itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/Answer">
<div itemprop="text">
Most airlines in India require a minimum of 10 passengers to qualify for group fares. IndiGo, Air India, Emirates, and Qatar Airways all operate dedicated group desks for bookings of 10 or more passengers. Group fares typically include one free seat per 10-15 passengers paid, flexible name change policies up to 72 hours before departure, and pricing protection against demand-based fare increases. Group fare requests must be submitted through the airline's group desk, not through standard booking channels.
</div>
</div>
</details>

<details itemscope itemprop="mainEntity" itemtype="https://schema.org/Question">
<summary itemprop="name"><strong>What are the most profitable group travel segments for Indian travel agents?</strong></summary>
<div itemprop="acceptedAnswer" itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/Answer">
<div itemprop="text">
The most profitable group travel segments for Indian travel agents are corporate offsites (25-200 people, repeat annual booking, Rs 5,000-15,000 per person margin), interest-based tours such as photography, birding, and trekking groups (8-20 people, high per-person spend), pre-wedding and bachelorette/bachelor trips (10-20 people, experience-driven with strong add-on sales), pilgrimage groups (15-200 people, high repeat rates and community referrals), and school and college educational trips (recurring institutional relationships). Corporate and interest-based groups generate the highest per-person margin; pilgrimage groups generate the highest volume.
</div>
</div>
</details>

<details itemscope itemprop="mainEntity" itemtype="https://schema.org/Question">
<summary itemprop="name"><strong>How do travel agents manage the coordination for large groups?</strong></summary>
<div itemprop="acceptedAnswer" itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/Answer">
<div itemprop="text">
The most effective approach for managing group coordination is to appoint a single point of contact within the group (the group leader, HR manager, or teacher) and route all communication through them. The agent manages suppliers; the group leader manages the internal group. A structured payment schedule with a 25% non-refundable deposit at booking filters out non-serious enquiries. A dedicated WhatsApp Business group for the trip - with the agent as admin - handles document sharing and updates without consuming the agent personal communication channel.
</div>
</div>
</details>

<details itemscope itemprop="mainEntity" itemtype="https://schema.org/Question">
<summary itemprop="name"><strong>How do travel agents find group travel clients in India?</strong></summary>
<div itemprop="acceptedAnswer" itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/Answer">
<div itemprop="text">
Group travel clients in India are primarily found through community relationships and direct corporate outreach rather than search advertising. The most effective channels are: religious and alumni communities where agents position themselves as the go-to group travel coordinator, direct outreach to HR managers and admin staff at companies with 50 or more employees, and messages to existing individual clients offering group travel services. Wedding planners and event coordinators are also strong referral sources for wedding group and destination celebration travel.
</div>
</div>
</details>

<details itemscope itemprop="mainEntity" itemtype="https://schema.org/Question">
<summary itemprop="name"><strong>Should travel agents include a free seat for the group leader in group packages?</strong></summary>
<div itemprop="acceptedAnswer" itemscope itemtype="https://schema.org/Answer">
<div itemprop="text">
Yes. Including a complimentary seat for the group leader is standard practice in group travel packages in India, and it is a significant selling point when competing for group business. The free seat is funded from the margin built across the paying passengers - on a 20-person group at Rs 8,000 margin per person, the total margin is Rs 1,60,000, and the group leader's cost of Rs 30,000-40,000 is easily absorbed while maintaining strong net margin. Airlines typically provide one complimentary seat per 10-15 passengers at group fare, which partially or fully covers this.
</div>
</div>
</details>

</div>

---

## Bottom Line

Group travel is not more complicated than individual travel. It is different - and the difference works in the agent's favour. One group booking of 20 people generates more income than a month of individual domestic bookings, builds a relationship with a repeat client (the group leader or corporate account), and creates referrals across a network that no digital advertisement can replicate.

The agents who build group travel into their business model work the same hours and earn significantly more. The entry point is not complicated: identify one corporate contact, one community group leader, or one existing client who organises travel for others - and offer to handle everything. That first group booking changes the economics of the business.

---

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## Related Reading

- [Travel Agent Commission Rates India 2026](/en/blog/travel-agent-commission-india-2026) - what every product category pays, including group booking margins
- [How to Get Clients as a Travel Agent in India 2026](/en/blog/how-to-get-clients-travel-agent-india-2026) - building the client relationships that generate group bookings
- [Domestic vs International Travel Agent India 2026](/en/blog/domestic-vs-international-travel-agent-india-2026) - understanding which segment generates the best margin

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## Sources & References

1. [IATA](https://www.iata.org) - Group booking policies and airline group desk standards, BSP India 2026
2. [IndiGo](https://www.goindigo.in) - Group fare terms, minimum group size, and free seat policy for domestic and international groups, 2026
3. [Air India](https://www.airindia.com) - Group desk contact and group fare terms, international routes, 2026
4. [Hotelbeds](https://www.hotelbeds.com) - Group hotel rate structures and minimum room block requirements for wholesale agents, 2026
5. [TAAI](https://www.taai.in) - Travel Agents Association of India: group travel segment data and agent margin benchmarks, 2025-26
6. [TBO Holidays](https://www.tboholidays.com) - Group package rates, ground handler terms, and volume discount structures for Indian agents, 2026
7. Google Trends India - Search interest for 'group travel packages India': consistent year-round score, peak 81 (December 2025-January 2026 holiday season)
8. Commission and margin figures are based on wholesale rates from TBO Holidays, Hotelbeds, and DOTW as practised by Indian travel agents in 2026. Individual rates vary by volume, destination, and supplier relationship. Always verify current rates directly with your supplier.

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_Source: https://www.flyo.ai/en/blog/group-travel-packages-india-2026_  
_Published 2026-05-31 by Utpal Ravi_
