AtlasProtect.io helps to identify destinations at risk for travel professionals
AtlasProtect.io has launched a SaaS platform designed to help travel agencies, TMCs and MICE planners to navigate rising geopolitical and regulatory risks with more informed decision-making.
The project had been under consideration since summer 2025, but recent global tensions accelerated its development, according to co-founder Chloé Rezlan. A lawyer specializing in tourism law, Rezlan identified a growing need among travel professionals facing tighter regulations, increasing litigation, and a more unstable international environment.
AtlasProtect.io positions itself at the crossroads of geopolitical intelligence, compliance, and artificial intelligence. The platform delivers a 360-degree view of risk exposure across destinations and portfolios.
“The idea is to provide a tool that gives a comprehensive overview of risk, both by destination and globally,” Rezlan said. The system connects to multiple APIs and data sources, including government travel advisories and international health data, to generate destination risk scores based on criteria such as political stability, health risks, diplomatic tensions, and airspace restrictions. It also provides real-time alerts and predictive insights.
A key feature allows users to quickly export risk assessments into quotes and booking documents. The platform aggregates traveler advisories, highlights no-go zones, and offers detailed mapping with major tourist attractions, cities, and airports. Users can pinpoint locations and instantly identify areas to avoid.
One of the platform’s standout components is an AI-powered legal assistant named Claire. Initially focused on handling modifications, cancellations, compensation claims, and non-compliance cases, the assistant is designed to continuously improve through legal case law. Rezlan feeds the system with curated tourism law decisions, which are analyzed, simplified, and contextualized to ensure accurate interpretation. The database is updated weekly with new rulings.
The initiative stems from real-world client needs. Rezlan noted that while she identified the demand as a lawyer, it extended beyond traditional legal services. A 2024 court ruling reinforced the advisory duty of travel agencies, requiring them to go beyond basic entry formalities. Combined with growing global risks, this creates what she describes as an increasingly heavy burden for industry players. AtlasProtect.io is positioned as a complementary tool to legal services, offering broader decision-support capabilities.
Beyond the technology, Rezlan sees AI reshaping the legal profession, enabling both firms and clients to save time while reserving human expertise for complex or strategic cases.
The platform is available via subscription. Current users are beta testers, mainly small to mid-sized travel agencies and tour operators. The commercial rollout is being phased in based on user feedback. Future developments include CRM integrations, an air compensation calculator, and more granular risk analysis at country level rather than across the EU.
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