In this article
Welcome to the world of travel & tourism
Whether you love travel, people, and the sun, or you want a fun, sociable seasonal career abroad, this guide covers what a holiday representative actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A holiday representative (resort rep) looks after holidaymakers and ensures their trip runs smoothly. In simple terms: they look after guests and make sure the holiday goes perfectly. Think of them as the hosts of the holiday.
- Welcome and look after guests
- Run excursions and activities
- Solve problems and handle issues
- Make holidays memorable
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- People skills β you're the friendly face
- Energy β long, sociable days
- Problem-solving β things go wrong on holiday
- Calm β handling complaints
- Organisation β excursions and logistics
- Positivity β setting the holiday mood
Education & qualifications
No degree required β holiday reps are trained by tour operators, making it an accessible, people-focused entry into travel and tourism.
Typical responsibilities
- Welcome β greeting guests
- Care β looking after holidaymakers
- Excursions β running activities
- Problem-solving β handling issues
- Sales β excursions and extras
- Energy β making it fun
Responsibilities by seniority
New Rep
0β1 years
- Learns the resort
- Looks after guests
- Runs excursions
- Building confidence
- Toward experienced
Holiday Representative
1β4 years
- Manages guests
- Handles problems
- Drives excursion sales
- Trusted rep
- Toward senior
Senior / Resort Manager
4+ years
- Leads a rep team
- Manages the resort
- Handles escalations
- Mentors reps
- Toward management
Where holiday representatives work
ποΈ Beach resorts
Sun holidays.
πΏ Ski resorts
Winter holidays.
π¨ Hotels
In-resort reps.
π’ Cruises
Cruise hosting.
π¨βπ©βπ§ Family resorts
Family holidays.
π Party destinations
Young travellers.
A day in the life
Greeting new arrivals β the welcome that sets the tone for their whole holiday.
Running an excursion or activity, showing guests the best of the destination.
Solving a problem β a room issue or a complaint β keeping guests happy.
Hosting a welcome meeting and selling excursions, the sociable heart of the job.
Guests looked after, problems solved, holidays made. The host of the holiday. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Travel and live abroad
- Fun and sociable
- People-focused
- No degree needed
- Meet people from everywhere
Pros & cons
β Advantages
- Travel and live abroad
- Fun and sociable
- People-focused
- No degree needed
- Meet people from everywhere
- Accommodation often included
- Great life experience
β Disadvantages
- Seasonal and insecure
- Long hours, little time off
- Modest pay
- Handling complaints
- Away from home
- Always 'on' and upbeat
Salary potential β global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where β β β β β β β β β β = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Rep β lead reps
- Resort Manager β run a resort
- Area Manager β manage destinations
- Tour operator roles β operations / office
- Travel roles β broaden into travel
- Events / hospitality β related fields
Holiday Representative vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Holiday Representative You are here | Looks after holidaymakers | Customer service, travel | Baseline | Accessible |
| Travel Agent | Books trips for clients | Travel, customer service | Similar | Accessible |
| Tour Guide | Leads tours and trips | Travel, presenting | Similar | Accessible |
| Flight Attendant | Looks after passengers | Service, safety | Similar | Accessible |
| Travel Agency Manager | Runs a travel agency | Leadership, travel | Higher | Accessible |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
People still love package holidays and resort experiences, keeping holiday reps in steady seasonal demand, with the role offering a route into travel and tourism careers.
- Package holidays stay popular
- Resorts need reps
- It's a route into travel
- People want great holidays
- Steady seasonal demand
Fun facts π€
Holiday reps get to live and work in holiday destinations.
They're the friendly face that makes a holiday memorable.
It's an accessible, people-focused way into travel and tourism.
Reps meet people from all over the world.
It's a stepping stone into travel and resort management.
Myths about this role
"It's just a holiday yourself."
β It's long hours of service, problem-solving, and being always 'on'.
"Anyone can do it."
β Looking after guests and solving problems is a real skill.
"It's not a real career."
β It leads to resort and travel management.
"It's all sun and fun."
β It's hard, sociable work with complaints and long days.
"It pays brilliantly."
β Pay is modest, though accommodation is often included.
Is this job right for you?
β Good fit if you...
- Love travel and people
- Are energetic and sociable
- Can solve problems calmly
- Want to live abroad
- Are upbeat and positive
- Want a route into travel
β Maybe not for you if...
- You want to be home-based
- You dislike long hours
- You can't handle complaints
- You want high, stable pay
- You dislike being 'on' all day
- You want job security
Fun & travel-filled
Holiday representative is a fun, sociable, travel-filled seasonal career, where people skills and energy turn into living and working in holiday destinations, with a route into travel and resort management.
β Advantages
- Travel and live abroad
- Fun and sociable
- People-focused
- No degree needed
- Great life experience
β Challenges
- Seasonal and insecure
- Long hours, little time off
- Modest pay
- Handling complaints
- Away from home
How to get started
- Apply to a tour operator they train you up.
- Learn the resort and role looking after guests.
- Look after guests and sell excursions build experience.
- Become a senior rep lead a team.
- Advance resort manager or travel operations.
What to know before you start
- It's service and problem-solving, not a holiday yourself
- Looking after guests is a real skill
- No degree needed β operators train you
- Package holidays keep demand steady
- It's a route into travel and tourism
- It leads to resort and travel management
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think being a rep is just a holiday yourself. It's long hours, always 'on,' always upbeat β welcoming guests, running excursions, and solving problems from morning till night. When someone's holiday goes wrong, I'm the one who fixes it. It's hard, sociable work.
Holiday rep Β· 3 seasons in
The life experience is amazing β I get to live and work in holiday destinations, meet people from all over the world, and the accommodation's usually included. The pay's modest, but for travel, people, and adventure, nothing beats it.
Holiday rep Β· 4 seasons in
It's a real route into travel. I started as a rep, became a senior rep, then a resort manager, and now I work in travel operations. The people and problem-solving skills you build as a rep open doors across the whole travel industry.
Resort manager Β· 7 years in