How to Monetise Your Travel Blog with Link Switchers and Why They Beat Some Traditional Networks

If you’ve been running a travel blog for a while, you’ve probably dabbled in affiliate marketing. It’s one of the most popular ways for travel creators to earn an income from their work — and for good reason.
But if you’re still stuck manually adding affiliate links from programs like Awin, there’s a more efficient, often more profitable way to do it: link switchers.

Additionally, they help when brands close the official programs (like Booking.com recently) or close their account in traditional networks, like TripAdvisor and Expedia did in Awin, to name a few.

In this post, we’ll break down what link switchers are, why they work well for travel bloggers, and how Travelpayouts and Stay22 compare to traditional networks like Awin.

What Is a Link Switcher?

A link switcher is a tool that automatically turns regular outbound links on your site into monetised affiliate links — without you having to insert affiliate parameters every time manually.

For example:

  • You write, “Check out this great hotel in Barcelona on Booking.com.”
  • Your link switcher automatically transforms that Booking.com link into an affiliate link tied to your account.
  • You get paid when a reader books — without lifting a finger after publishing.

It’s set-and-forget monetisation.

Why Link Switchers Work So Well for Travel Blogs

Travel content is full of outbound links — to hotels, tours, attractions, airlines, and travel insurance providers.
Doing manual affiliate linking for every single one is time-consuming and error-prone. Link switchers:

  • Monetise all your links automatically (including older posts)
  • Work across hundreds of merchants instantly
  • Capture missed opportunities when you forget to add an affiliate link
  • Help avoid broken affiliate links if a program changes its URL structure

Travelpayouts — The Travel Affiliate Hub

Travelpayouts is an affiliate network built for the travel niche. Its link switcher (called Auto Links) automatically monetises links to 100+ travel brands, including Booking.com, GetYourGuide, Viator, Agoda, and Rentalcars.

It is the one we use in this blog, and it helped us right away with the Booking.com issue.

Pros:

  • Travel-focused — all merchants relevant to your audience
  • Auto Links switcher covers most major travel brands
  • Transparent dashboard for clicks, bookings, and revenue
  • Extra tools like white-label search forms and widgets

Cons:

  • Commission rates vary by partner (some may be lower than direct programs)
  • Payout thresholds are slightly higher than some networks (only if you choose bank transfer)

Best for: Bloggers heavily focused on hotels, tours, flights, and travel services.

Stay22 — Location-Based Affiliate Linking

Stay22 takes the link switcher concept a step further — their tool not only monetises links, but also offers interactive maps showing hotels, Airbnbs, and activities near a location.

They also have SmartLinks, which auto-detects and monetises relevant travel links, even from user-generated content.

Pros:

  • Visual, map-based booking widgets increase conversion
  • SmartLinks monetise a wide range of travel brands
  • Strong with both hotel and Airbnb bookings
  • Transparent, real-time reporting

Cons:

  • More hotel/accommodation-focused — fewer flight or tour partners than Travelpayouts
  • Requires some styling to blend map widgets into your site design

Best for: Destination guides, accommodation round-ups, event or festival travel posts.

Other Link Switchers


Skimlinks

  • Type: General affiliate link switcher
  • How it works: Automatically monetises links to 48k+ merchants across multiple niches, including some travel brands.
  • Pros: Huge coverage, one account for thousands of programs.
  • Cons: Commissions are often lower than joining programs directly; less travel-specific reporting.

VigLink (now Sovrn Commerce)

  • Type: General
  • How it works: Similar to Skimlinks — turns outbound links into affiliate links automatically.
  • Pros: Large merchant base, hands-off once set up.
  • Cons: Less focus on travel; payment terms can be slower.

ThirstyAffiliates (WordPress Plugin)

  • Type: WordPress-based affiliate link management (not a network)
  • How it works: It lets you cloak, manage, and insert affiliate links quickly. Not automatic across all links, but can be semi-automated.
  • Pros: You control the links and relationships; good for bloggers who want manual oversight.
  • Cons: Doesn’t “discover” links automatically — you still have to add them.

Geniuslink

  • Type: Smart link switcher for global audiences
  • How it works: Routes users to country-specific store pages (Amazon, iTunes, etc.) and can monetise with multiple affiliate programs.
  • Pros: Great for global travel audiences; avoids sending a UK visitor to a US-only link.
  • Cons: Best for retail/product-heavy blogs, not always ideal for hotels/tours.

How They Compare for Travel Bloggers

ToolTravel FocusAutomationMulti-MerchantBest Use Case
Travelpayouts✅ Auto LinksBroad travel monetisation
Stay22✅ SmartLinks✅ (hotels & Airbnb heavy)Accommodation-focused
SkimlinksMulti-niche blogs
VigLink/SovrnGeneral affiliate automation
GeniuslinkGlobal audience redirection
ThirstyAffiliatesSemiManual control for WP sites

Awin — The Traditional Network Approach

Awin is a massive affiliate network with thousands of merchants, including some travel brands (TUI, lastminute.com).
But unlike Travelpayouts or Stay22, Awin is not automated by default. You have to:

  1. Apply to each merchant individually
  2. Wait for approval
  3. Create links manually for every mention in your content

Pros:

  • Huge variety of merchants (travel and beyond)
  • Potentially higher commission rates if you work directly with brands

Cons:

  • No built-in link switching — everything is manual unless you add third-party tools
  • More admin overhead: approvals, compliance checks, link management
  • Links can break if a brand leaves the network or changes tracking

Best for: Multi-niche sites or bloggers who want specific brands not covered by travel-focused networks.

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