When an airline cancels a flight in the middle of the night and your traveler is stranded, the question of which business travel platform you're on matters. In no uncertain terms, you don't want to be left wondering: Will there be someone who picks up, who knows our account, and can actually fix this?
Every platform in this comparison offers 24/7 support, as such offerings are essentially universal. What it doesn't tell you is who that support actually is, what they can do when something genuinely goes wrong, and whether they know anything about your company before the call starts.
When it comes to your business travel program, you’re effectively looking for the platform that, among other things, expeditiously resolves a cancellation or delay for you, rather than putting the onus on your traveler to figure it out over the phone or with an airline agent at the airport.
With that in mind, our piece compares five leading SMB travel platforms on one question: When something breaks—frustratingly, it does happen more than anyone would like—who actually shows up?
Anyone who manages travel for a team has, regrettably, been in this situation. Whether it’s a flight that’s canceled mid-connection, a hotel overbooking during a peak conference week, or poor weather moving through a hub airport and, suddenly, three of your people are stranded in different cities, and someone back at the office is frantically fielding calls.
Here’s four ways in which a program can help solve any number of business travel problems that come your way:
Booking.com for Business is a booking channel, not a managed travel program—and its support model reflects that honestly.
Travelers can reach Booking.com's general consumer support around the clock for reservation changes, cancellations, and booking questions. What isn't there: a dedicated contact for program administrators, policy visibility when a disruption comes in, or any proactive outreach when an itinerary is affected.
For a solo traveler handling their own bookings, that's workable for standard transactions. For any team where someone is responsible for the program—even part-time—it means every disruption is handled from scratch, by the traveler, without backup.
The free pricing model reflects where this platform fits. For teams transitioning out of fully unmanaged travel—personal cards, no visibility, no process—Booking.com for Business is a sensible first step. It's also the support model they'll outgrow first.
Perk offers 24/7 support on every plan tier, which is a genuine strength at the Starter level—most platforms reserve live support for paid upgrades. The design philosophy is self-serve first: Standard changes and rebookings happen in-app, with agents stepping in for what the UI can't handle.
That model works well for common disruptions with clean solutions. Where it requires more attention: The support operation has historically been EU-anchored, which is worth evaluating if your travelers and admins are primarily U.S.-based—domestic routing issues, airline-specific re-accommodation options, and time-sensitive changes during U.S. business hours are all scenarios where regional coverage depth matters. Program-level questions route through the same core support channels as traveler issues at SMB tiers. Perk does not prominently market a named, dedicated account manager for smaller customers, so admins should expect to work with the general support team rather than a single assigned contact, which means the agent handling a program-level question arrives without the account context a named manager would carry.
The November 2025 rebrand from TravelPerk to Perk signals where the product is heading: broader travel intelligence capabilities and active U.S. SMB account management expansion in 2026. That buildout is underway but not yet complete. For teams evaluating Perk today, the honest picture is solid 24/7 access for standard situations, with U.S.-specific and program-level support that's improving.
Egencia's support model is backed by the American Express Global Business Travel infrastructure—one of the largest managed travel operations in the industry, with travel counselors available around the clock via chat, phone, and in-app messaging in more than 30 languages. On April 14, 2026, Amex GBT launched a major evolution of the Egencia platform adding Egencia AI—a conversational booking assistant operating within tools like Microsoft Teams—and a native Concur Expense integration. The 24/7 support model predates that launch; it's the foundation the new capabilities sit on.
For companies that fit the profile—50 or more travelers, a dedicated person managing the program, a procurement environment comfortable with annual contracts—this is the most capable support infrastructure in this comparison. Agents can coordinate disruptions at scale when a weather event or cancellation affects multiple travelers at once.
Egencia operates through negotiated annual contracts with no public pricing. Third-party benchmarks (Vendr's 2026 transaction data) indicate small-business platform fees—under 200 employees, under 500 bookings per year—of $500-$1,500 per month plus $15-$25 per transaction. The support infrastructure is excellent—but accessing it requires a procurement and onboarding process that takes weeks and assumes a buyer with dedicated internal resources to manage it. For SMBs where travel management is one of a dozen responsibilities, that process is a real cost before the first disruption is even resolved.
Navan provides genuine 24/7 support globally—but the model is AI-first, not human-first, and that distinction matters for how you evaluate it. Ava, Navan's AI assistant, handles approximately 50%-54% of all support interactions end-to-end, including complex rebookings and disruption coordination. When Ava can't resolve an issue or detects that a traveler needs a person, it escalates to a human agent with a full hand-off summary—so the agent arrives with context rather than starting from scratch. The proactive layer is also real: Ava monitors itineraries, applies airline waivers during disruption events, and surfaces options before travelers have to ask.
The honest assessment here is the same as in a policy compliance evaluation: Navan was built for a buyer who has—or will hire—a dedicated travel or ops owner who actively manages the vendor relationship and the platform. The tools are sophisticated and genuinely valuable, and the value is realized by someone with time to use them. For the SMB where that person exists, Navan delivers enterprise-quality support at mid-market scale. For teams where travel management is a Tuesday afternoon responsibility, the relationship management overhead tends to precede the moment the support infrastructure kicks in on your behalf.
On pricing: Navan's travel booking platform—including 24/7 support—is free for companies with up to 300 employees. The $35,000-$53,000 per year figure that appears in some comparisons represents the cost of adding full expense management at $15 per active user per month, not the travel or support tier. For SMBs evaluating the platform, that separation matters: The support is accessible from day one at no cost, while the full T&E integration is what moves pricing into that range.
What separates Businesstravel.com from the other platforms in this comparison isn't a feature—it's what the support model assumes about the person using it. Whether you're a travel manager who needs to stop being the backstop for every missed connection, an EA juggling travel alongside 10 other priorities, or a founder who doesn't have anyone to delegate it to at all, the platform treats you as someone who deserves real support without needing an enterprise contract to unlock it.
That matters most when something actually goes wrong. Regardless of the issue—a complex rebooking across multiple legs, a hotel overbook with nothing comparable left in inventory, a same-day itinerary change because a client moved a meeting—real travel experts are available on every paid plan, starting at the Essential tier ($275/year). They arrive with context: your account, your policies, your traveler's full trip history.
For travel managers, that's a meaningful shift. The exception work that used to come back to you—because the booking tool couldn't handle it and no one else was available—gets handled by a team that actually knows your program. You're still in charge of the program; you're just no longer the last line of defense on every disruption.
Dedicated account management is available for enterprise deployments, but at the Essential and Pro tiers you're already well past what a consumer booking channel offers. Both travelers and administrators have access to the same support, on any paid plan, from day one.
For most SMBs, the person handling a disruption isn't a travel professional. They're managing it alongside everything else on their plate—and they need a platform that absorbs the complexity, not one that redirects it.
Three things separate support models that actually help from ones that look like help:
Coverage for both travelers and administrators. When something breaks, two people need to act: the traveler navigating the disruption and the person back home responsible for the program. A support model that only serves one of them leaves the other starting from scratch. Both need a channel with real program context.
Human access that doesn't require a contract first. Some platforms deliver excellent agent infrastructure—inside a multi-week procurement and onboarding process designed for enterprise buyers. Others make human support available from the moment you sign up. For growing SMBs, the question isn't only whether the support is good. It's when you can actually use it.
An agent who knows your program before the call starts. The biggest support failure in managed travel isn't unavailability—it's context loss. Explaining the policy, the traveler's role, the reason the timeline matters, every single call. Agents with account visibility before the disruption change the experience from transaction to genuine partnership.
Most platforms in this comparison address one or two of these. The shortlist gets short, fast.
The right support model doesn't announce itself on a smooth trip. It shows up when the trip stops being smooth—when the connection drops, the hotel overbooks, or the cancellation notice arrives at the worst possible hour. The platforms that earn trust in those moments are the ones that treat support as part of the product rather than a feature in the marketing materials.