SpiceJet Travel Agent Login: Registering and Booking SG 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
Three real ways a travel agent books SpiceJet (SG) in 2026 — the SpiceJet trade portal, GDS, and B2B aggregators — plus registration steps, deposit reality, and a one-login alternative.
Quick answer
A travel agent books SpiceJet (SG) three ways in 2026: directly through SpiceJet's own travel-agent portal after you register and load a deposit, through a GDS (SpiceJet content shows up in Amadeus and other systems), or through a B2B aggregator like TBO or Riya Connect where SG sits alongside every other airline. SpiceJet's agent registration starts at corporate.spicejet.com/agencyregistration.aspx and the agent login is at book.spicejet.com/loginagent.aspx — but verify both on SpiceJet's official site before you commit money, because URLs and terms change. Most small agents skip the direct deposit and book SG through an aggregator instead.
The three channels to book SpiceJet, ranked by who they suit
There's no single "SpiceJet agent app" that every travel agent uses. You pick a channel based on your volume, your cash position, and how many other airlines you sell. Here's the honest lay of the land.
| Channel | How it works | Best for | The catch |
|---|---|---|---|
| SpiceJet direct trade portal | You register with SpiceJet, load a prepaid deposit, log in and book SG fares directly | High-volume agents who sell a lot of SG on specific routes | Large deposit, SG-only content, you manage one more login |
| GDS (Amadeus, etc.) | SpiceJet inventory appears in your GDS terminal alongside full-service carriers | IATA agents already on a GDS for international and FSC tickets | GDS contract, segment fees, learning curve; LCC content can be limited |
| B2B aggregator / consolidator | One login (TBO, Riya Connect and similar) sells SG plus every other airline | Most small and mid-size agents | You ride their commercials, not SpiceJet's direct terms |
For most agents reading this, the aggregator route wins on day one — you get SpiceJet without a separate SG deposit, and you get IndiGo, Air India and Akasa in the same screen. We break down the trade-offs in our guide to the best B2B flight booking portal.
Does SpiceJet have an official travel-agent login?
Yes — SpiceJet runs a travel-agent (trade) channel with its own login. The agent sign-in page lives at book.spicejet.com/loginagent.aspx and asks for a username and password, with a "forgot password" link and a "register" link that points to the agency registration page. So the portal is real and active.
A few things to keep straight:
- Names move around. Over the years SpiceJet's trade access has surfaced under a few subdomains and product names. The two you'll actually use are the agency registration page and the agent login page above. Treat any other URL with suspicion until you confirm it on SpiceJet's own site.
- It's a prepaid, deposit-based model. Once you're in, you upload funds (deposit / credit) and your bookings draw down against that balance. There's no "book now, pay later" for the trade channel.
- It can sell more than SG. SpiceJet's agent platform has historically let partners book across airlines and add services, not only SpiceJet flights — but the depth varies, so don't assume it replaces a full aggregator.
Because SpiceJet doesn't publish the full eligibility checklist on the public registration page (it captures your email and sends you the form), the only reliable move is to register and read the agreement you're sent. Verify the exact portal and terms on SpiceJet's official site.
Step-by-step: registering as a SpiceJet agent
The direct route is straightforward on paper. The public registration flow at corporate.spicejet.com/agencyregistration.aspx works on an "email us, we'll send the form" basis rather than a one-page instant signup.
- Submit your interest. Provide your email on the agency registration page; SpiceJet sends back a registration form to fill and submit. You can also write to the sales desk at salesdesk@spicejet.com.
- Prepare your business documents. For any Indian airline trade account, keep these ready: GST registration, PAN, proof of business (firm registration / shop establishment), bank details and address proof. If you're an IATA-accredited agency you'll have an IATA number; non-IATA agents often hold a TIDS ID from IATA instead. SpiceJet doesn't publish a hard IATA-only rule on the public page, so confirm what they need in the form they send you.
- Sign the agreement and set up payment. The trade account runs on a prepaid deposit. You load funds — by bank transfer or, where allowed, credit card — and that balance funds your tickets.
- Get your login and test a booking. Once activated, sign in at the agent login page, run a small live booking end to end, and confirm the PNR, ticket and invoice all generate cleanly before you push real volume through it.
New to the trade entirely? Start with how to become a travel agent in India first — GST, PAN and a TIDS/IATA ID are the same prerequisites for almost every airline and aggregator.
Deposits, wallet and the cash reality
This is where the direct channel stings small agents. SpiceJet's trade terms are deposit-led, and the numbers are not pocket change.
On SpiceJet's published deposit terms for credit-card uploads, the framework has historically sat at a minimum deposit of around ₹50 lakh and a ceiling in the crores, with a percentage fee deducted above a certain slab, no interest paid on parked funds, and only Indian-issued cards accepted. Those figures move, so treat them as indicative and confirm the current slab in the agreement SpiceJet sends you — don't budget off a blog number, including this one.
- Your money sits idle. A deposit earns you nothing while it waits; it's working capital locked up against one airline.
- Top-ups are on you. Run the balance low mid-day and bookings stop until you reload. Build a buffer.
- One airline, one pile of cash. Do this for SG, IndiGo, Air India and Akasa separately and you've tied up serious capital across four deposits.
That last point is exactly why aggregators and one-login B2B platforms exist — they pool the float so you're not funding four airlines out of four separate wallets.
What you can actually do once you're logged in
Whether you book SG direct or through a portal, the day-to-day tasks are similar. A SpiceJet trade login typically lets you:
- Search and book SpiceJet fares and issue tickets against your deposit balance
- Manage the PNR — add or correct passenger details, do web check-in, and reprint the ticket
- Reschedule and cancel, with change/cancellation charges plus any fare difference applied per SG's rules
- Process refunds back to your wallet or original payment, subject to the fare's refund policy
- Add ancillaries — baggage, seats, meals and SpiceMax (SpiceJet's premium add-on with extra legroom, priority and meals)
- Raise a group request for 9+ passengers via SpiceJet's group desk
One thing the login won't change: the fare you pick. SpiceJet sells in fare families, and what's refundable, what carries free baggage and what costs extra to change all depend on the bucket you book. Get the fare logic straight in our SpiceJet fare types guide before you quote a client, or you'll eat the change fee yourself.
Group bookings: a separate desk, not the standard login
For groups — typically 9 or more passengers on the same itinerary — SpiceJet runs a dedicated platform at groups.spicejet.com. It's open to both registered agents (with IATA codes and agency credentials) and non-registered agents, and it automates quote requests, payments and passenger uploads with a tracking dashboard.
The flow is request-and-confirm, not instant: you submit the group, SpiceJet quotes a held fare, you pay a deposit to block seats, then add names by a deadline. The group desk (groupdesk@spicejet.com) handles queries, with stated hours of roughly 10:00–18:00, Monday to Saturday. Build a buffer into your client timeline — group quotes don't come back instantly, and held fares expire.
Direct vs aggregator: which should you use for SpiceJet?
Short version: book SG direct only if you push enough SpiceJet volume to justify parking a large deposit against one airline. Otherwise, an aggregator or one-login B2B platform is the saner default.
| Factor | SpiceJet direct | Aggregator / one-login B2B |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cash | Large SG-only deposit | One shared wallet across all airlines |
| Airlines covered | SpiceJet (plus limited cross-sell) | SpiceJet, IndiGo, Air India, Akasa and more |
| Logins to manage | One per airline | One |
| GST invoicing | You reconcile per airline | Consolidated in one place |
| Best when | Very high SG-specific volume | Mixed-airline, everyday agency work |
There's also a 2026 reality you can't ignore: SpiceJet's operations have been thin. Through this period the airline has flown a much-reduced fleet — a large share of aircraft grounded, domestic market share down near the low single digits, and on-time performance among the weakest in India while it works to return grounded jets to service. None of that changes how you log in, but it does mean you should quote SG carefully, watch for schedule changes, and keep a backup carrier in hand for the client. A multi-airline portal makes that switch painless.
Comparing across carriers? See our sibling guides for IndiGo agent login, Air India agent login and Akasa Air agent login, plus their fare logic in the IndiGo, Air India and Akasa fare-type guides.
The one-login alternative: FlightGPT Partner
If juggling a separate deposit and login for every airline sounds like a headache, that's the gap FlightGPT Partner is built to close. It's a single B2B login that books SpiceJet, IndiGo, Air India and Akasa — plus series, group, fixed-departure and wholesale fares you won't always find on an airline's own trade portal.
- One agency wallet funds every booking, instead of four separate airline deposits
- GST invoicing handled in one place, so reconciliation isn't a month-end scramble
- SpiceJet alongside the rest, so if an SG flight gets cancelled or rescheduled you can rebook the passenger on another carrier in the same screen
Honest framing: a one-login platform is the right call when you sell a mix of airlines and want your cash pooled. If you're an SG-heavy specialist with the volume to justify it, SpiceJet's own deposit terms might still earn you better direct economics — run the numbers both ways. You can start a flight search on FlightGPT, browse popular routes, or read more on the FlightGPT blog.
Frequently asked questions
What is the SpiceJet travel agent login URL?
SpiceJet's travel-agent login has been served at book.spicejet.com/loginagent.aspx, where you sign in with a username and password, and new agents register via corporate.spicejet.com/agencyregistration.aspx. URLs and product names change over time, so confirm the current portal on SpiceJet's official site before you log in or load any money.
Do I need IATA accreditation to become a SpiceJet agent?
SpiceJet doesn't publish a strict IATA-only rule on its public registration page. In practice you'll need standard business proof — GST, PAN, firm registration and bank details — and either an IATA number or a TIDS ID from IATA. The exact requirement is spelled out in the registration form SpiceJet emails you, so verify it there rather than assuming.
How much deposit does SpiceJet require from travel agents?
SpiceJet's trade channel is prepaid and deposit-led. Its published credit-card upload terms have historically started around a ₹50 lakh minimum with a ceiling in the crores, no interest on parked funds, and Indian-issued cards only. These figures move, so treat any number — including this one — as indicative and confirm the current slab in your agreement with SpiceJet.
Can I book SpiceJet without registering directly with the airline?
Yes. Most small and mid-size agents book SpiceJet through a GDS or a B2B aggregator (TBO, Riya Connect and similar) or a one-login platform like FlightGPT Partner, rather than parking a large deposit with SpiceJet directly. You get SG inventory alongside every other airline, funded from a single wallet.
How do agents handle SpiceJet group bookings?
Groups of roughly nine or more passengers go through SpiceJet's dedicated group platform at groups.spicejet.com, not the standard agent login. You request a quote, SpiceJet returns a held fare, you pay a deposit to block seats, then add passenger names by the deadline. The group desk (groupdesk@spicejet.com) handles queries during stated business hours.
Is SpiceJet reliable to sell to clients in 2026?
Sell it with care. Through this period SpiceJet has operated a much-reduced fleet, with a large share of aircraft grounded, low single-digit domestic market share and weak on-time performance while it works to return grounded jets to service. Quote SG carefully, watch for schedule changes, and keep a backup carrier ready — a multi-airline portal makes rebooking a disrupted passenger far easier.