How Self-Service Travel Became Another Unpaid Job For Travelers: How Self-Service Travel Became Another Unpaid Job for Passengers
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There was a time when booking a flight meant calling an agent, showing up at the airport, handing your bag to someone, and walking to your gate. Simple. Somewhere along the way, airlines and hotels quietly handed most of that work back to you, dressed it up as “convenience,” and started charging you extra if you wanted a human being to do it instead.
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That shift did not happen overnight, but it has accelerated sharply in recent years, and travelers are starting to notice the weight of it.
The labor you do not get paid for
Every time you check in on an app, print your own boarding pass, drag your bag to a self-drop belt, scan your own ticket, and navigate a chatbot when something goes wrong, you are performing work that airlines and hotels used to employ people to do. The industry calls this “self-service.” A more honest name might be labor transfer.
Economists have a term for this kind of shift: the externalization of costs. Companies move a task off their payroll and onto the customer, reducing their expenses while the customer absorbs the time and effort. It works because travelers have little choice once the entire system is built around it.
Frontier made the logic explicit earlier this year when it eliminated its phone support center entirely, moving to fully digital communications. Alaska Airlines followed by removing check-in kiosks at nine airports, directing passengers to use its app instead. Alaska framed the move as part of a $2.5 billion plan to reimagine the travel experience. What that means in practice is that if you arrive at the airport without a smartphone or a printed boarding pass, you are stuck.
When “seamless” only works for some people
The word the industry keeps reaching for is “seamless.” It is a useful word because it implies the friction has been removed. What it quietly omits is that the friction has not disappeared. It has just been relocated to the passenger’s side of the transaction.
For younger, tech-comfortable travelers with reliable phones and good data connections, the app-first approach is probably fine. For older travelers, people with disabilities, international visitors unfamiliar with a carrier’s app, or anyone whose phone battery died at the wrong moment, it is something else entirely. It is a system that functions smoothly only for the people who need the least help.
Travel advisor Annette Johnson, based in Colorado Springs, has watched the shift accelerate with growing frustration. Airlines have dropped phone support, added fees for airport check-ins handled by a human agent, and in some cases pulled out kiosks altogether. “It feels like you’re being punished if you need a little help,” she said. That feeling is not incidental. It is, in many ways, the point. By making human assistance scarce and then charging for it, airlines create a financial incentive for passengers to self-serve, which keeps labor costs down.
The fee that makes the strategy visible
Nothing reveals the logic of self-service travel more clearly than the check-in fee. Several carriers now charge passengers who check in at the airport counter rather than online or through an app. The fee is framed as a surcharge for a premium service, but what it actually prices is a baseline human interaction that used to be standard.
When you pay that fee, you are not buying something extra. You are paying to opt out of doing the airline’s work yourself. That framing matters, because it shows how completely the default has flipped. The expectation is now that you will do the work. Choosing not to is the exception, and exceptions cost money.
Hotels have followed a similar path. Digital check-in, mobile room keys, and app-based concierge services have reduced front desk staffing at many properties. Guests who prefer to speak to someone at arrival increasingly find shorter hours, fewer staff, and longer waits.
AI is accelerating the shift
The rise of AI-powered customer service is adding another layer. Airlines and travel platforms are deploying chatbots to handle complaints, rebooking requests, and refund inquiries. When these tools work well, they can resolve simple problems quickly. When they fail, and they fail often, passengers find themselves trapped in loops with no clear path to a human being.
The AI revolution is spreading quickly across the travel industry, and the business case is obvious: a chatbot costs a fraction of a call center agent. But the traveler on the receiving end of a failed rebooking during a weather delay does not care about the business case. They need someone who can actually solve the problem, and that person is increasingly hard to find.
What travelers can actually do about it
The structural incentives here favor the airlines, not the passengers. Regulatory pressure on hidden fees has grown in some markets, but the self-service trend itself is unlikely to reverse. What travelers can do is go in with clear eyes.
- – Know before you fly whether your carrier has phone support, and save any backup contact numbers before you travel, not after something goes wrong.
- – Download boarding passes and check in online before you leave home. Do not depend on airport kiosks that may no longer exist.
- – If you need accessibility assistance or have a complex itinerary, contact the airline directly as early as possible. The window for human help is narrowing.
- – Consider travel insurance that includes 24-hour human support lines, which can be the difference between a rebooking and a stranded night.
The travel industry will keep calling this progress. Some of it genuinely is. But progress that transfers cost and effort onto the customer while charging them for any alternative is worth naming accurately. You are not just a passenger anymore. You are part of the crew, and nobody is compensating you for the shift.
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