The reforms come under the 2025 ATAS Charter Review.
ATIA accredited members will benefit from wider recognition of industry qualifications and more proportionate travel insurance requirements under the new training and insurance settings.
Now in effect, the changes are designed to reduce unnecessary cost and compliance friction, expand workforce pathways, and better align accreditation settings with modern travel business models.
Members can expect broader recognition of qualifications beyond Certificate III, acknowledgement of prior learning and frontline experience, insurance requirements aligned to actual business risk, and removal of unnecessary duplication in cover.
More details in tomorrow’s issue of Travel Daily.
