Akasa Air Travel Agent Login: Registering and Booking QP in 2026
By Aarav Sharma (Aarav Sharma covers Indian airline operations, airport infrastructure and route economics. He writes about Tier-1 and Tier-2 airport developments, IndiGo and Air India fleet strategy, and the unsung Indian aviation hubs travellers should know about.) · Published · Last updated · 9 min read
Akasa Air (QP) is one of India's fastest-growing carriers, and agents want a clean way to book it. Here's how the agent login works, what registration takes, and the direct-vs-aggregator trade-off in 2026.
Quick answer
To book Akasa Air (QP) as a travel agent in 2026, you've got three routes. Register on Akasa's own travel-agent portal at agents.akasaair.com (the B2B sign-up sits at b2b-admin.akasaair.com) and book direct. Or pull QP through a GDS — Akasa signed its first-ever GDS content deal with Travelport in March 2026, so Travelport+ agents can now ticket Akasa. Or you book QP through a B2B aggregator portal that already holds an Akasa connection, which is how most small and mid-size Indian agents do it. Always confirm the exact portal URL and current eligibility on Akasa Air's official site before you register.
The three ways an agent can book Akasa Air in 2026
Akasa Air has grown up fast. What started as a single-aircraft start-up in 2022 now runs roughly 28 domestic destinations plus a handful of international ones, with a fleet pushing past 34 Boeing 737 MAX jets and more arriving almost every month. That growth changed how the trade gets at QP inventory. Here's the lay of the land.
| Channel | What it is | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Direct agent portal | Akasa's own travel-agent site at agents.akasaair.com, after B2B registration | Agents who want airline-direct fares and full PNR control on QP |
| GDS (Travelport) | Akasa content via Travelport+ / Smartpoint, live since the March 2026 agreement | IATA agencies and TMCs already running on a GDS |
| B2B aggregator portal | A third-party agent portal that holds an Akasa connection alongside IndiGo, Air India, SpiceJet | Single-login agents who want one wallet across all carriers |
Most Indian retail agents land on the third option, because juggling a separate login and deposit for every airline gets old fast. But it pays to understand all three, so you can pick what actually fits your volume.
Booking Akasa direct: the agent portal and login
Akasa runs a dedicated travel-agent portal branded "IT's YOUR SKY". The login lives at agents.akasaair.com (you'll see the sign-in at agents.akasaair.com/login), and the B2B registration form sits on a separate admin host, b2b-admin.akasaair.com. Because Akasa moves its trade pages around as the programme matures, treat those URLs as a starting point and verify the live links on Akasa Air's official site before you hand over any documents.
Once you're approved and logged in, the portal is built around the day-to-day work an agent actually does:
- Search and book across Akasa's domestic and international network, in Saver and Flexi fare families.
- Manage PNRs — pull up bookings, add passenger details, add ancillaries like extra baggage, seats and Café Akasa meals.
- Web check-in on behalf of the passenger.
- Reschedule and date-change, with fare difference and applicable change fees collected at the time.
- Cancellations and refunds, processed per the fare rules of the ticket.
- GST invoices — Akasa lets you enter GST details and pull tax invoices in bulk, which matters for corporate files.
For anything that needs a human, Akasa runs an Agency Care desk. You submit a form with your agency name, the PNR and the issue, and a rep gets back, typically within a couple of days. Keep that channel for escalations, not routine bookings.
Registration and eligibility: what you'll need
Akasa hasn't published a single tidy checklist that covers every agent type, so the safest move is to fill the B2B registration form and let their team confirm what applies to you. That said, anyone who's onboarded an Indian airline before knows the usual shape of the paperwork. Expect to provide some combination of the following:
- GST registration (GSTIN) — non-negotiable for B2B ticketing in India and for raising compliant invoices.
- PAN of the firm or proprietor.
- Business proof — registration certificate, shop-and-establishment licence, or equivalent showing you're a genuine travel business.
- IATA or TIDS number if you have one. IATA accreditation isn't required to be a travel agent in India, but a TIDS (Travel Industry Designator Service) ID is free from IATA and many airline and aggregator portals ask for it as a quick identifier.
- KYC of the signatory and basic contact details.
New to all this? Our walk-through on how to become a travel agent in India covers GST, PAN and TIDS from scratch. Don't have the exact registration steps for Akasa in front of you — confirm them on Akasa Air's official site, since the airline updates its trade onboarding as it scales.
Credit, wallet and deposit: how the money works
This is where the honesty matters: we won't quote a deposit figure or a commission percentage, because airline trade terms change and Akasa decides them case by case. What's worth understanding is the shape of how agent payments work, so you can ask the right questions.
Airline-direct portals in India almost always run on an advance-deposit or prepaid-wallet model. You park money with the airline (or its appointed channel), and every ticket you issue debits that balance in real time. When the balance runs low, you top up. Some larger agencies negotiate a credit line; most start prepaid. The practical upshots:
- Plan your float around your daily booking volume so you're not stuck mid-sale with an empty wallet.
- Reconcile your ledger against issued PNRs regularly — small mismatches compound.
- Ask up front about refund timelines, because a cancelled ticket's money usually returns to the same wallet, not your bank, and that affects your working capital.
For exact deposit minimums, top-up methods and any incentive structure, get it in writing from Akasa's trade team during onboarding. Don't rely on what a forum says — terms differ by agency tier and they move.
GDS and the Travelport tie-up
For years, low-cost carriers like Akasa lived mostly outside the traditional GDS world, which made life awkward for IATA agencies and corporate TMCs that run everything through Amadeus, Sabre or Travelport. That changed in 2026. On 2 March 2026, Akasa Air signed its first-ever GDS content agreement — with Travelport — granting Travelport preferred GDS status for India point-of-sale.
In plain terms: agents on Travelport+ (and the Smartpoint interface) can now search, price and ticket Akasa flights inside their normal GDS workflow, including ancillaries. Akasa's commercial leadership framed the choice around Travelport's strength in India and its agent-first focus; Travelport called it being entrusted as Akasa's first GDS partner.
What this does not mean: Akasa isn't broadly live on Amadeus and Sabre the same way as of mid-2026, so don't assume QP shows up in every GDS. If you're a GDS-based agency, confirm your specific platform's Akasa coverage before you promise a client a QP ticket. The direction of travel is clear — more distribution, not less — but check the live status rather than guessing.
Direct vs aggregator: which actually suits you
Booking Akasa direct gets you the cleanest fares and full control over the PNR. The catch is operational: a separate login, a separate wallet, separate reconciliation — for one airline. Multiply that across IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet and your back office turns into a tab-juggling exercise. (We break down the rest of the carriers in our guides to the IndiGo agent login, the Air India agent login, and the SpiceJet agent login.)
| Direct (agents.akasaair.com) | Aggregator / B2B portal | |
|---|---|---|
| Fares | Airline-direct, no markup layer | May carry a thin platform markup |
| Login & wallet | One per airline | One login, one wallet, all airlines |
| Setup effort | Separate registration per carrier | Register once |
| Extras | Akasa-only inventory | Often series, group and wholesale fares too |
| Best when | Akasa is a big share of your sales | You sell across many airlines |
There's no universally right answer. High-volume Akasa specialists often go direct. Generalists who sell a bit of everything lean aggregator. Plenty of agents run both — direct for the carriers they push hardest, an aggregator for everything else. If you want the deeper comparison, see our rundown of the best B2B flight booking portal for travel agents in India. And before you quote any Akasa fare, it helps to know the Akasa Air fare types cold, the same way you'd know IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet fare families.
How FlightGPT Partner gives you one login for all of it
If the multi-login headache is your real problem, that's exactly what FlightGPT Partner is built to solve. It's a single B2B login that lets you book Akasa, IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet — plus series, group, fixed-departure and wholesale fares you won't always find on an airline's own portal — from one screen. One agency wallet covers every carrier, so you're not topping up four separate balances, and GST invoicing is built in for clean corporate files.
To be straight about it: a one-login portal trades a sliver of control for a lot of saved time. If Akasa is the bulk of your business, going direct still makes sense. But if you're booking across airlines all day and want your wallet, your reconciliation and your invoices in one place, FlightGPT Partner is the kind of setup that pays for itself in hours not spent logging in and out. Either way, keep verifying Akasa's own portal and terms on the official site — channels evolve, and the trade reality in 2026 is that QP is more reachable than it's ever been.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Akasa Air travel agent login URL?
Akasa Air's travel-agent portal is branded "IT's YOUR SKY" and the login is at agents.akasaair.com (sign-in at agents.akasaair.com/login). B2B registration is handled on a separate admin host, b2b-admin.akasaair.com. Because Akasa updates its trade pages as the programme grows, confirm the live URLs on Akasa Air's official site before registering.
Do I need IATA accreditation to book Akasa Air as an agent?
No. IATA accreditation isn't required to be a travel agent in India. For Akasa's B2B onboarding you'll typically need GST registration, PAN, and business proof; a free TIDS ID from IATA is often useful as an identifier. Confirm the exact eligibility with Akasa's trade team, since requirements can differ by agency type.
Is Akasa Air available on the GDS?
Yes, through Travelport. Akasa signed its first-ever GDS content agreement with Travelport on 2 March 2026, with preferred GDS status for India point-of-sale, so Travelport+ agents can search and ticket QP. As of mid-2026 it isn't broadly live across every other GDS the same way, so check your specific platform's Akasa coverage.
How does payment work on the Akasa agent portal?
Airline-direct agent portals in India generally run on an advance-deposit or prepaid-wallet model: you keep a balance and each ticket debits it in real time, topping up when it's low. Larger agencies may negotiate credit terms. We don't quote deposit figures because Akasa sets them case by case — get the exact terms in writing during onboarding.
Can I book Akasa Air without registering directly with the airline?
Yes. Many Indian agents book Akasa through a B2B aggregator portal that already holds an Akasa connection alongside other carriers, so you get one login and one wallet across all airlines instead of registering separately with each. FlightGPT Partner is one such single-login option that also covers series, group and wholesale fares.
Does Akasa Air fly international routes that agents can book?
Yes. Alongside roughly 28 domestic destinations, Akasa operates international routes including Jeddah, Doha, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Phuket as of 2026, with more in the pipeline. Schedules on some Gulf routes have shifted, so confirm current operating status before ticketing an international Akasa segment for a client.