
Spanish-Brazilian software house Travel Compositor announced on Tuesday (5 May) that it has embedded Visagov’s e-visa engine into its dynamic-packaging platform used by more than 300 Brazilian travel agencies and tour operators. The API connection lets agents calculate visa eligibility, display required documents and submit applications while building an itinerary—eliminating the need to send clients to third-party websites.
For agencies that prefer a standalone solution or need visa support beyond the 80 destinations currently covered, VisaHQ offers a complementary service layer. Through its Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/), the company provides real-time requirements, application assistance and door-to-door passport logistics for hundreds of jurisdictions, allowing travel consultants to keep complex or niche itineraries under one roof.
For corporate-travel managers the integration promises shorter lead times and fewer booking touch-points. Visa costs can now be added to a single invoice, and status updates feed automatically into the PNR so that travellers and HR departments receive alerts if an authorisation is delayed. Visagov covers 80 destinations—including the United States, India and Saudi Arabia—that collectively represent close to 70 % of Brazilian outbound business travel. Eduardo Batista, Travel Compositor’s commercial director in Brazil, said the partnership responds to an ‘explosion in electronic travel authorisations’ worldwide. The European Union’s ETIAS and the UK’s ETA, both scheduled to start charging fees in 2026, are expected to affect at least 1.4 million Brazilian travellers a year. Automating the process reduces call-centre load and helps agencies comply with new duty-of-care rules requiring them to verify entry formalities before ticketing. Technology analysts note that the move positions Travel Compositor against larger GDS providers, which have been slow to incorporate visa solutions. For Visagov, gaining access to the Brazilian B2B market strengthens its Latin-American footprint ahead of the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, when regional demand for quick travel authorisations typically spikes. Agencies already using Travel Compositor will receive the new module free of charge for 60 days; thereafter pricing will depend on transaction volume. Early adopters include Flytour Business Travel and Schultz Operadora, which plan to use the data feed to predict visa-processing bottlenecks and advise clients to start applications sooner.
For agencies that prefer a standalone solution or need visa support beyond the 80 destinations currently covered, VisaHQ offers a complementary service layer. Through its Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/), the company provides real-time requirements, application assistance and door-to-door passport logistics for hundreds of jurisdictions, allowing travel consultants to keep complex or niche itineraries under one roof.
For corporate-travel managers the integration promises shorter lead times and fewer booking touch-points. Visa costs can now be added to a single invoice, and status updates feed automatically into the PNR so that travellers and HR departments receive alerts if an authorisation is delayed. Visagov covers 80 destinations—including the United States, India and Saudi Arabia—that collectively represent close to 70 % of Brazilian outbound business travel. Eduardo Batista, Travel Compositor’s commercial director in Brazil, said the partnership responds to an ‘explosion in electronic travel authorisations’ worldwide. The European Union’s ETIAS and the UK’s ETA, both scheduled to start charging fees in 2026, are expected to affect at least 1.4 million Brazilian travellers a year. Automating the process reduces call-centre load and helps agencies comply with new duty-of-care rules requiring them to verify entry formalities before ticketing. Technology analysts note that the move positions Travel Compositor against larger GDS providers, which have been slow to incorporate visa solutions. For Visagov, gaining access to the Brazilian B2B market strengthens its Latin-American footprint ahead of the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, when regional demand for quick travel authorisations typically spikes. Agencies already using Travel Compositor will receive the new module free of charge for 60 days; thereafter pricing will depend on transaction volume. Early adopters include Flytour Business Travel and Schultz Operadora, which plan to use the data feed to predict visa-processing bottlenecks and advise clients to start applications sooner.