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Is ASAP Tickets Legit? Third-Party Flight Booking Review

Updated: January 2026

RISKY • REAL

ASAP Tickets issues real flight tickets and can save $100-250 vs direct booking.

Philippines call center finds deals and adds free flight coverage. However: families left stranded 10 days with cancelled returns, seat selection runaround for 3 months, they cancel reservations and charge 50% credit + $349 'admin fee', ask for tips on transactions, and have $100 markup built in. Works 60% of time but disasters are catastrophic. Not worth risk.

Key Findings

What It Is

Third-party flight booking via phone

Main Risk

Left family stranded 10 days in Tanzania (no return flight)

Best Action

Book direct with airline through Google Flights

The Pattern

Red Flags

What To Do

  1. 1Book direct with airline through Google Flights
  2. 2Use credit card with travel insurance (must book direct)
  3. 3Get actual airline price first, let ASAP beat it
  4. 4If you use them: Get everything in writing
  5. 5Screenshot all confirmations and correspondence
  6. 6Verify reservation directly with airline immediately
  7. 7Have backup funds for emergencies
  8. 8Monitor reservation daily leading up to trip

What NOT To Do

Copy-Paste Script

Booking [number]. Paid $[X]. Issue: [Reservation cancelled / Stranded with no return / Seat selection denied]. Demand full refund within 24 hours. If denied, I dispute charge and report to DOT for abandoning passengers.

FAQ

Is ASAP Tickets a scam or legit?

They issue real tickets and sometimes save money, but have catastrophic failures. Families stranded 10 days abroad, reservations cancelled days after booking, 50% credit + $349 fee for their mistakes. Works most of the time but when it fails, it's disaster-level bad. Not worth the risk.

Yes, sometimes $100-250 less than direct booking. But ex-employee confirms $100 markup is standard ($800 ticket sold for $900). So 'savings' are often just less markup. Real question: is $150 savings worth risk of being stranded or losing $349 in fees when they cancel?

Ex-employee revealed agents are trained to ask for 'whiskey not tea' (code for tips). It's coached as part of sales process. You shouldn't tip - you already paid markup. This alone shows the business culture is problematic. Book direct, don't tip third parties.

Based on reports: They offer 50% credit (not refund) minus $349 'administrative fee.' So $1000 ticket becomes $150 credit. They blame airlines but it's their booking error. Fight back: dispute with credit card, file DOT complaint, demand full refund. Don't accept their terms.

No. Book direct with airline via Google Flights using credit card with travel insurance. ASAP's $150 savings isn't worth: (1) Being stranded abroad, (2) Losing 50% + $349 on cancellations, (3) 3-month seat selection nightmares, (4) No insurance coverage for third-party bookings. Save $150, risk $2000+. Not smart math.

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