IndiGo Travel Agent Login: How Agents Book 6E in 2026

IndiGo travel agent login explained: how agents register on the 6E Agent Portal, book via GDS or a B2B aggregator, and set up credit in 2026.

IndiGo Travel Agent Login: How to Register and Book 6E 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

IndiGo runs a dedicated 6E Agent Portal for the travel trade. Here's how an agent registers, what documents you need, how credit works, and where a one-login B2B aggregator fits in.

Quick answer

If you're a travel agent who wants to sell IndiGo (6E), your main official route is the 6E Agent Portal at 6eagentportal.goindigo.in — you register your agency there, get an Agency ID, and log in to search, book and ticket. You can also book IndiGo through a GDS (Travelport/Galileo, Amadeus, Sabre) once your PCC is provisioned, or through a B2B aggregator portal that already holds airline access and gives you one login for everything. Don't confuse any of this with IndiGo for Business / 6E SME — that's a corporate self-booking tool for a company's own staff, not a trade channel for agents. Always confirm the exact portal name, eligibility and document list on IndiGo's official site before you start.

The three ways an agent can book IndiGo

There's no single "agent login" that covers every scenario. In practice, Indian agents reach IndiGo's inventory through one of three channels, and most established agencies use a mix.

Which one suits you depends on volume, whether you already have a GDS, and how much back-office juggling you're willing to do. More on that trade-off below.

Registering on the 6E Agent Portal: what you'll typically need

To get airline-direct access, you create an agency account on the 6E Agent Portal (the registration page sits at 6eagentportal.goindigo.in/agency-registration). You'll choose whether you're registering as a Retail or Corporate agency — and this matters, because corporate and retail fares can't be accessed with the same credentials. Agencies handling both usually need separate Agency IDs.

IndiGo's published terms reference IATA permissions and industry compliance, so the trade channel is built around accredited or registered agencies. The exact document checklist is shown on the portal itself, but based on standard Indian travel-trade onboarding you should have the following ready before you apply.

What you'll likely needWhy it's asked
GST registration (GSTIN)For tax invoicing; the GST number you enter at booking is whose name the invoice is raised in.
PAN of the businessStandard KYC for a registered Indian entity.
Business registration / proof of tradeFirm registration, shop & establishment, or company incorporation papers.
IATA number — or a free TIDS codeIndiGo's trade terms reference IATA permissions. No IATA accreditation? IATA's TIDS (Travel Industry Designator Service) gives non-IATA agents a free industry ID many channels accept.
Bank details / cancelled chequeFor settlement, refunds and (where relevant) BSP.
Authorised contact + addressManager name, address, phone, email for the agency profile.

Treat the table as a preparation list, not gospel — verify the current, exact requirements on IndiGo's official site, since airlines update onboarding rules and the precise paperwork can change.

How credit, deposit and payment work for trade bookings

Here's where new agents trip up. On the airline-direct channel, an agency typically funds bookings through an agency form of payment (a prepaid/credit arrangement tied to your IndiGo credentials) or by paying per booking with a credit card. Credit-card form of payment is the path of least resistance — it generally works without extra IndiGo provisioning. Agency payment, by contrast, needs your account specifically enabled for it.

A few realities worth knowing:

This is the part that pushes a lot of multi-airline agents toward an aggregator: instead of separate prepaid balances at each airline, you keep one wallet that debits as you book.

Once you're logged in: what you can actually do

A live agent login on the 6E channel is more than a search box. You can generally:

The catch is that all of this lives inside one airline's system. Sell five carriers and you're logging into five portals, each with its own screens, its own refund quirks and its own balance to keep topped up.

IndiGo for Business is NOT the agent channel

This one causes real confusion, so let's be blunt about it. IndiGo for Business / 6E SME is a corporate self-booking product. It's meant for an eligible company that registers itself and lets its own registered employees book travel — with perks like discounted seats, lower change and cancellation fees, and MIS reports to track the firm's travel spend.

It is not a way for a travel agent to get trade access to IndiGo's inventory to sell to the public. If your goal is to book for paying clients as an agency, the SME program is the wrong door. You want the 6E Agent Portal, a GDS, or a B2B aggregator. Sign up for SME thinking it's an agent login and you'll hit a wall — the eligibility and the whole purpose are different.

6E Agent Portal (trade)IndiGo for Business / 6E SME
Who it's forTravel agencies selling to clientsA company booking for its own staff
PurposeResale / commercial agent bookingsManaged corporate self-booking
Typical userAgent / IATA or TIDS agencyRegistered employees of the SME

Airline-direct vs a B2B aggregator: the honest trade-off

Neither path is "best" in the abstract — it depends on how you work. Here's the straight version.

Going airline-direct (6E Agent Portal / GDS)

Going via a B2B aggregator

Most growing agencies end up doing both — keeping a direct line to a carrier or two while running day-to-day volume through an aggregator that covers the whole market. If you're still deciding which trade platform to lean on, our guide to the best B2B flight booking portal for travel agents in India walks through what to look for.

Simpler alternative — one login for every airline

If juggling separate airline portals sounds like a chore, that's exactly the problem a B2B aggregator solves. FlightGPT Partner gives you a single B2B login that books IndiGo, Air India, Akasa and SpiceJet in one place — plus series, group, fixed-departure and wholesale fares you won't always find on an airline's own retail screen. It runs on an agency wallet with GST invoicing, so you fund one balance and book across carriers instead of keeping money parked at five different airlines.

To be clear about what it is: an aggregator sits between you and the airlines. The upside is one login, one wallet and consolidated invoicing; the trade-off is you're working through a platform rather than the carrier's own desk. For an agent who sells more than one airline, that's usually a fair swap. FlightGPT Partner is built around exactly that — the agencies that want IndiGo and everyone else without the login sprawl.

Either way, do your homework on fare rules. Our IndiGo, Air India, Akasa Air and SpiceJet fare-type pages are a quick way to compare what each fare family includes before you quote a client. And if you're still building the business itself, start with how to become a travel agent in India.

Getting started this week: a practical checklist

If you want IndiGo access live without spinning your wheels, work in this order.

StepDo this
1Get your paperwork in one folder: GSTIN, business PAN, trade/registration proof, bank details, and an IATA or free TIDS number.
2Decide your channel — airline-direct (6E Agent Portal / GDS), aggregator, or both.
3For airline-direct, register on the 6E Agent Portal and pick the correct agency type (retail vs corporate). Verify the live document list on IndiGo's site.
4Set up your payment method — credit card to start, or get agency form of payment enabled if you'll do volume.
5For one-login coverage across carriers, onboard a B2B aggregator like FlightGPT Partner and fund the wallet.

While you're at it, the same logic applies to the other carriers — see our companion guides on the Air India agent login, the SpiceJet agent login and the Akasa Air agent login. And for route ideas and fare context to pitch clients, browse popular routes or the rest of the blog from the FlightGPT home page.

Frequently asked questions

What is the official IndiGo travel agent login URL?

IndiGo runs a dedicated trade portal — the 6E Agent Portal — where agencies register and log in to book and ticket 6E flights. It lives on the goindigo.in domain (6eagentportal.goindigo.in), with separate registration and agency-login pages. Because airlines update their portals, confirm the current URL and login page on IndiGo's official site before you sign up.

Do I need an IATA number to register as an IndiGo agent?

IndiGo's trade terms reference IATA permissions, so the channel is built around accredited or registered agencies. If you don't hold full IATA accreditation, look at IATA's TIDS (Travel Industry Designator Service), which gives non-IATA agents a free industry identifier that many channels accept. Check IndiGo's current eligibility rules to confirm exactly what they require.

Is IndiGo for Business the same as the agent portal?

No, and mixing them up is a common mistake. IndiGo for Business / 6E SME is a corporate self-booking tool for a company's own registered employees, with perks like lower change fees and MIS reports. It is not a trade channel for travel agents selling to the public. For agent access, use the 6E Agent Portal, a GDS, or a B2B aggregator.

Can I book IndiGo through a GDS like Amadeus or Galileo?

Yes. IndiGo content is available through the major GDSs, including Travelport (Galileo/Apollo), Amadeus and Sabre. On credit-card form of payment it generally works for any agency with no special IndiGo setup. For agency-payment or corporate fares you'll need IndiGo-specific credentials provisioned against your PCC, and corporate and retail fares require separate Agency IDs.

How does payment and credit work for an IndiGo agent?

You typically either pay per booking by credit card or use an agency form of payment (a prepaid/credit arrangement enabled on your IndiGo account). Credit card is the easiest to start with; agency payment needs your account specifically enabled. Deposit amounts and credit limits aren't published as a flat figure — confirm them with IndiGo or your account manager, since they vary by agency.

Is it better to book IndiGo direct or through an aggregator like FlightGPT Partner?

It depends on volume. Airline-direct keeps you closest to source with full access to IndiGo's own fares, but it's one airline per login and one balance per carrier. A B2B aggregator such as FlightGPT Partner gives you one login and one wallet across IndiGo, Air India, Akasa and SpiceJet, plus series and group fares, with GST invoicing — at the cost of working through a platform. Many agencies do both.