TravelTech News · Issue 10
The travel tech industry isn’t just adding AI features any more — it’s rewiring the pipes underneath.
Lead Story

Mirai, TPConnects and the quiet revolution in AI-native booking infrastructure
PhocusWire
Two stories published this week by PhocusWire, taken together, tell you something important about where travel distribution is heading. Mirai has rebuilt its booking engine from the ground up to support conversational and agent-driven interactions, while TPConnects has added a Model Context Protocol layer to its Iris content platform, making airline content machine-readable for AI agents and automated tools. Neither announcement is flashy. Both are foundational. For PMS vendors, OTAs and hotel groups still treating AI as a bolt-on, these moves are a signal: the next generation of booking infrastructure is being designed specifically for AI agents as the primary interface, not the human browser. When your content can’t be parsed by an AI agent, it won’t be surfaced. When your booking engine assumes a human clicking through screens, it will be bypassed. The window to retrofit legacy systems is narrowing. The companies building native AI architecture now are not just modernising — they are setting the standards everyone else will eventually have to meet.
TravelTech & Hospitality Briefs
Grab launches 13 AI travel experiences in one go
Grab has announced 13 AI-powered experiences, four of which target the end-to-end travel journey. The scale of the release underscores how Southeast Asia’s super-app model gives Grab a structural advantage: it owns the consumer relationship across transport, payments and now travel planning in a way no standalone OTA can replicate.
Mews and Turneo bring experiences into the PMS fold
Mews and Turneo’s new native integration lets hotels attach tours, wellness and rental bookings directly to guest profiles and folios, then feeds that context into AI for personalised recommendations. For hoteliers chasing ancillary revenue, embedding experiences at the PMS layer — rather than via disconnected third-party links — is the difference between a suggestion and a sale.
DCS Plus embeds conversational AI into travel agency back-office
DCS Plus has launched an AI-enabled version of TINA, its mid- and back-office platform, giving travel agency teams the ability to query live operational and financial data in plain language. It is a modest but telling move: the back-office, long the unglamorous engine room of the trade, is becoming the next AI battleground.
Staynex acquires Sleap.io ahead of token launch
Staynex Group has acquired hotel booking platform Sleap.io, adding European reach and booking technology to its stack ahead of a planned token launch. The deal is a reminder that blockchain-adjacent travel ventures have not disappeared — they have simply been quietly assembling the conventional infrastructure needed to make tokenised models credible.
Must Reads
PhocusWire — The trust gap in agentic commerce: why AI booking confidence remains the industry’s hardest unsolved problem.
PhocusWire — The three phases of AI adoption — and a frank assessment of why so many travel companies are stuck in phase one.
PhocusWire — Why OTAs still capture a surprisingly small share of tours and experiences bookings, and what it would take to change that.
On the Calendar
Phocuswright Europe 2026
June 2026 | Barcelona, Spain | The leading strategic conference for European travel industry executives, covering AI, distribution and investment trends.
ITB Berlin
March 2027 | Berlin, Germany | The world’s largest travel trade show, offering a key annual benchmark for technology adoption across the global travel industry.
As AI agents move from experiment to infrastructure, the travel businesses that survive the shift will be those that started building for machines before their competitors even noticed the need.
TravelTech News is published every Tuesday by Travel Tech Talent