Travelwithsira: Find Cheapest Flights
Hopper and Google Flights already dominate this space with better data.

Sira promises a tidy chat-first flow that shows published fares as the final price and even offers 24-hour holds — that no-upsell pitch is refreshing. If the backend truly normalizes GDS/ATPCO data into instant conversational responses, that’s a meaningful engineering feat. Still, the product faces brutal competition from incumbents and the landing page leaves open questions about baggage/seat handling, refunds, and real-time availability.
Leisure and business travelers who want faster, simpler flight booking and people familiar with airline distribution (travel builders/ops)
You describe the trip in plain English, and Sira returns normalized options instantly. The price shown is the final price — no added service fees or checkout upsells.
We surface published fares directly rather than consolidator inventory, and we keep the flow intentionally minimal. The goal is to reduce friction between intent and booking.
Under the hood, we reconcile availability and pricing from standard distribution channels and present a simplified booking layer on top.
Would love feedback from anyone who has worked with airline distribution or built in travel.
Hopper and Google Flights already dominate this space with better data.
Flight search API competing with Amadeus and Duffel on simplicity and pricing.
Finally answers the wifi question before you book — no more guessing on long flights.
Kayak Explore and Google Flights flex dates already own this space completely.
End-to-end book pipeline, but AI writing tools and publishing dashboards already exist separately.
The product nails a simple, useful promise: tell it your city, price cap and preferred warmth and it emails you only when a cheap sunny weekend appears. The UI shows thoughtful preference controls (flight-time, temperature, price sliders) and a clean onboarding flow, but the idea itself is derivative of existing flight-alert services and the site gives no immediate signal about data sources, coverage or how 'cheap' is calculated.