Every "best travel affiliate programs" list looks the same: a wall of brand logos and vague promises of "great commissions." This one focuses on the two numbers that actually determine whether a link makes money — the commission rate and the cookie window — across the categories travel creators actually link to, and why almost all of them are reachable through a single network instead of fifteen separate applications.
This is the final part of our Travel Creator Income Roadmap series. By now you've picked a platform, started posting, and maybe even sent your first traffic from Pinterest. This guide is about making sure the links you're placing are the right ones.
The Network Behind Every Pick Below
Most of the brands in this comparison — Booking.com, GetYourGuide, Aviasales, Kiwi.com, Tiqets, EKTA, eSIM providers, and more — are reachable through one application via Travelpayouts. One dashboard, one payout, no minimum traffic.
Browse the Travelpayouts Brand List → Join FreeThe Leaderboard: Typical Rates by Brand
Ranked by how commonly travel creators use them — not just headline commission %
Rates below are typical ranges for travel-niche affiliates in 2026 and can vary by region, booking value, and individual program terms. They're meant to give you a sense of scale when deciding where to focus link placement, not as guaranteed figures.
Why Booking.com and GetYourGuide rank highest despite a short cookie: they're the two categories almost every travel article naturally links to — "where to stay" and "what to do" — so even with a session-based cookie on hotel links, the sheer frequency of placement keeps them at the top. All eight of these are accessible through Travelpayouts.
Choosing by Category, Not Just Brand
What each category is good for, and where it fits in an article
Cookie Windows: The Number Nobody Talks About
A click today, a booking next month — does the program still pay?
A travel reader rarely books on the first visit. They click a hotel link while researching, close the tab, compare a few more options elsewhere, and book three days later. Whether that still counts as your referral depends entirely on the cookie window — how long the click is "remembered." Here's how typical windows compare:
What this means in practice: short cookie windows on hotel links aren't a reason to avoid them — they're simply why hotel links work best when placed right where a reader is actively deciding, rather than in a "save for later" context. Longer-cookie categories like insurance and tours are more forgiving if a reader books days or weeks after clicking.
One Network vs Fifteen Separate Logins
The operational case for starting with a network
Every brand in the leaderboard above has its own affiliate program if you apply directly — its own application, approval criteria (often with minimum traffic requirements), dashboard, payout threshold, and reporting format. Applying to all eight individually means managing eight separate logins to track commissions that might total a few euros each per month in the early days. A network consolidates this:
Hotels
Tours
Flights
Attractions
1 dashboard
Flights
Insurance
Hotels
Connectivity
One application, one set of links to generate, one monthly payout that combines commissions across every brand above a single threshold — instead of eight separate small payouts that might each take months to reach their individual minimums. For a deeper, account-by-account breakdown of how this compares to going direct with a single major brand, see our Travelpayouts vs Booking.com direct affiliate comparison.
Start With the Hub, Add Direct Programs Later
If a specific brand later offers you better direct terms once your traffic is established, nothing stops you from adding it. But for the first 50,000 monthly visits or equivalent audience, one network covering this entire leaderboard is simpler and, in most cases, earns about the same.
Join Travelpayouts Free →Your First Three Links
Don't try to integrate all 15 categories on day one
If you're setting up affiliate links for the first time, start with three: one hotel link (for "where to stay" sections), one tour/activity link (for "what to do" sections), and one flight link (for "getting there" sections). These three cover the majority of decision points in a typical travel article or video, regardless of whether your content lives on a blog, Instagram, TikTok, or is being pinned to Pinterest. Insurance and eSIM links are easy additions once you're publishing "before you go" or packing-related content — add them when that content naturally comes up rather than forcing them into everything.
The consistent thread across this whole series: whichever platform you chose in the Roadmap, whatever content pillar you're using on Instagram or TikTok, and however Pinterest sends people to your articles — these same three link categories, from the same Travelpayouts dashboard, are what actually turn that traffic into income.
Frequently Asked Questions
What creators ask before choosing where to link