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Fair Travel Isn’t a Switch — It’s a Transition

The way people discover and book travel has been changing for years.

For a long time, commission-heavy platforms shaped how accommodation and experiences were found. They made travel feel convenient and searchable, but the trade-off was often hidden: weaker direct relationships, less control for independent businesses, and less transparency about where money goes.

Today, more travellers want a clearer connection to the places they visit — and more businesses want to be discovered without losing a percentage of every booking. But that shift isn’t instant. And it isn’t simple.

Fair travel, in practice, is not something you switch on overnight.
It’s a transition.

The reality of booking direct

Booking direct can create healthier relationships on both sides. It can mean clearer communication, fairer economics for independent businesses, and a stronger sense of accountability.

But travel discovery still has a friction point: being found.

Many independent stays and locally rooted providers rely on large platforms because those platforms dominate attention. Leaving commission-based systems behind often means rebuilding visibility from scratch — and that takes time.

This is why the idea of transition matters. Change happens gradually, through better alternatives, clearer information, and steady shifts in behaviour — not through purity tests.

What Self Guided Travel is — and isn’t

Self Guided Travel is an independent, place-based travel publication published by ahchoo.

We do not operate tours, take bookings, or process payments. We do not act as a travel agent or intermediary. We don’t exist to own the transaction.

Instead, we focus on documenting routes, landscapes, and the places shaped by them — and, where relevant, connecting readers to independent businesses within that context.

Our work is built around place. Discovery happens through geography: trails, protected landscapes, regions, towns, and the locally rooted stays that sit naturally within them.

When we link to a business, the relationship remains direct: the reader is sent to the provider’s own website or contact details. Any booking or enquiry happens with them, not through us.

Why we’re open about the transition

Fair travel is often talked about as if it already exists as a finished system. In reality, most people — and most businesses — are navigating something more practical: partial change.

Some travellers book direct when they can, and use platforms when they can’t.
Some businesses depend on third-party sites for visibility while working towards a healthier balance.

We think it’s better to be honest about that reality than to pretend travel has already been “fixed”.

That’s why our Fair Travel Policy is clear about what we do and don’t do, how we operate, and what commission-free discovery means in practice. It recognises that:

  • Direct relationships don’t replace everything overnight
  • Not every business can shift at the same speed
  • Long-term discovery is part of making change possible

Self Guided Travel isn’t a finish line. It’s part of the wider movement towards something fairer and more transparent.

A quieter, longer-term model of discovery

Rather than optimising for transactions, the focus is on:

  • Long-term presence instead of short-term conversion
  • Place-led context instead of generic listings
  • Commission-free discovery instead of percentage-based dependency

For independent businesses, this means being found through the landscapes they belong to — rather than being reduced to price, availability, and ranking.

For readers, it means clearer pathways to engage directly, understand where money goes, and choose travel that feels more connected to place.

Being part of the change

We don’t expect travellers to change habits overnight.
And we don’t expect independent businesses to abandon existing systems instantly.

What we do believe in is momentum — built through better information, better discovery, and more direct relationships over time.

By documenting places carefully and linking readers directly to independent businesses where relevant, Self Guided Travel plays a small but meaningful role in that broader transition.

Fair Travel FAQs

What does “Fair Travel” mean at Self Guided Travel?

Fair Travel means supporting travel that is more transparent, more direct, and more considered over the long term. At Self Guided Travel, it means documenting places in a way that encourages direct relationships between readers and locally rooted businesses — without relying on commission-heavy systems.

Does Self Guided Travel take commission from bookings?

No. Self Guided Travel does not take commission and does not process bookings. Where relevant, we link directly to a provider’s own website or contact details so enquiries and bookings happen with them.

What kinds of businesses are featured on Self Guided Travel?

We feature independent, locally rooted places to stay and relevant local providers where they are closely connected to the routes, landscapes, and places we document. Businesses appear through editorial context and place-based reference, not through transactional marketplaces.

Is Self Guided Travel a booking site?

No. Self Guided Travel is a travel publication and reference tool. We don’t handle reservations or payments, and we don’t act as an intermediary between travellers and providers.

Why do you describe fair travel as a “transition”?

Because travel systems change gradually. Many people and businesses use multiple channels while they move toward more direct relationships. Fair travel is not an instant switch — it’s a shift that happens over time through better discovery, clearer information, and more transparent choices.