Ontario travelers should not buy travel services from Jo Albe Travel Co Inc., because TICO says the Ottawa-based company is not registered and is not authorized to sell travel services in Ontario. The warning matters for anyone booking airfare, vacation packages, religious travel, family trips, or last-minute overseas tickets through a local agent, WhatsApp contact, Facebook page, or referral.
The real concern is not just one company. It is this: before sending money for travel, Ontarians must confirm the seller is TICO-registered.
Is Jo Albe Travel Registered With TICO?
No, TICO says Jo Albe Travel Co Inc. is not registered with the Ontario travel regulator. The official TICO consumer alert lists the company as Jo Albe Travel Co Inc., 52 Scarlet Court, Ottawa, ON K1T 3R5.
TICO says it has received consumer complaints alleging the company acted as a travel agent without registration. The complaints allege that consumers paid for travel services that were not provided, and refunds were not issued.

That is the line travelers should not ignore: no registration means fewer protections if something goes wrong.
Why This TICO Warning Matters for Ontario Travelers
This warning matters because Ontario travel sellers must be registered with TICO to legally sell travel services in Ontario. TICO administers the Travel Industry Act, 2002, which governs travel retailers and wholesalers in the province.
When you book through a TICO-registered business, you may get access to:
| Protection | Why It Helps Travelers |
|---|---|
| Registration checks | Confirms the company is allowed to sell travel in Ontario |
| Complaint support | Gives consumers a formal route to raise issues |
| Compensation Fund access | May help when eligible paid travel services are not received |
| Required disclosures | Helps you see fees, cancellation terms, documents, and travel conditions before paying |
What Did TICO Say Happened With Jo Albe Travel?
TICO says complaints allege paid travel services were not delivered and refunds were not issued. In a separate enforcement update, TICO also said Jo Albe Travel Co Inc., Riham Chakron, and Jomaa Albelaas were charged with seven counts each of operating as a travel agent without being registered.
TICO further alleges the business accepted consumer funds by cash and e-transfer, and that some consumers either received one-way tickets only, leaving them stranded, or did not receive the travel services they paid for.
Important note: charges and allegations are not the same as a conviction. A fair report should say what TICO alleges, not treat every claim as already proven.
Also read – US Warns American Travelers in Russia Not to Photograph …
What Should You Do If You Paid Jo Albe Travel?
If you already paid Jo Albe Travel, gather proof first and contact TICO directly. Do not delete messages, receipts, e-transfer confirmations, call logs, screenshots, itinerary promises, or ticket numbers.
Follow these steps:
- Save every payment record, especially e-transfer or cash receipt details.
- Take screenshots of chats, emails, social posts, ads, and booking promises.
- Call TICO at 1-888-451-8426 or use TICO’s complaint page.
- Contact your bank quickly if you paid by card or e-transfer and ask about dispute or fraud-reporting options.
- Check airline ticket numbers directly on the airline’s official website, not only through the seller’s screenshot.
A practical travel tip: if someone sends you a flight confirmation, do not trust the PDF alone. Open the airline’s website, enter the booking reference and last name, and confirm the ticket is real, paid, and round-trip if that is what you purchased.
How To Check If a Travel Agency Is TICO Registered
The fastest safety check is to search the company name in TICO’s official directory before paying. Use the TICO agency search tool and confirm the business is active and in good standing.
Before sending money, ask for:
- The company’s TICO registration number
- A full legal business name
- A written invoice with all trip details
- Airline ticket numbers, not just “booking pending”
- Cancellation and refund terms in writing
- A card payment option, not cash-only pressure
Red Flags Before Booking Travel in Ontario
Walk away if the seller rushes you, avoids registration proof, or asks for informal payment. A cheap ticket is not a deal if the ticket does not exist.
Watch for these warning signs:
- “Pay now or the fare disappears” pressure
- Cash or e-transfer only
- No TICO number on invoice, website, or social media
- No physical business details
- Screenshots instead of official confirmations
- Refusal to explain refund terms
- One-way ticket issued when you paid for round-trip travel
Also read – Travel Warning: France Govt Bans Alcohol and Cancels …
Bottom Line: Check TICO Before You Book
Ontario travelers should verify the travel seller before paying, not after the trip falls apart. TICO’s warning about Jo Albe Travel Co Inc. is a reminder that a friendly referral, local address, or low airfare quote is not enough.
The safest move is simple: search the agency, confirm the registration, pay through traceable methods, and keep every document. A two-minute check can protect your vacation, your money, and your family’s return flight.
