skiplagged-travel-search

This skill should be used when the user asks to "find flights", "compare itineraries", "search hidden-city routes", "check cheapest dates", "explore destinations anywhere", "search hotels", or "plan a trip". Ground outputs in Skiplagged MCP tool results for flights, fare calendars, anywhere discovery, and hotels.

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Install skill "skiplagged-travel-search" with this command: npx skills add skiplagged/agent-skills/skiplagged-agent-skills-skiplagged-travel-search

Skiplagged Travel Search

Overview

Skiplagged MCP exposes travel search capabilities (flights, flexible date calendars, “anywhere” destination discovery, hotels + room details, and sometimes rental cars) as MCP tools. Prefer calling Skiplagged tools over guessing prices/availability.

Prerequisites

  1. Connect the MCP client to https://mcp.skiplagged.com/mcp over HTTP transport.
  2. List tools and confirm Skiplagged tools are visible before running workflows.
  3. Treat authentication as not required.
  4. Read references/setup.md for client-specific setup commands and examples.

Operating rules

1) Grounding rule

Always base answers on tool results. Never invent or guess prices, availability, or policies.

2) Tool-call discipline

  • Use minimal, correct parameters (avoid unnecessary filters unless user asked).
  • Prefer IATA airport codes when possible; otherwise accept city names and clarify if needed.
  • Use small result limits when supported (e.g., 3–7) and expand only if the user asks.
  • Chain multiple tool calls when needed, but avoid loops. Respect per-turn tool-call limits.

3) Post-call validation loop

After each tool call:

  1. Summarize what the tool returned in 1–2 sentences (what matters to a traveler: cost, time, stops, key tradeoffs).
  2. Decide the next step:
    • proceed (narrow or enrich),
    • self-correct (relax filters, adjust airports/dates),
    • or ask one targeted follow-up question.

4) Failure handling (empty or unhelpful results)

If results are empty/ambiguous:

  • Say so clearly.
  • Suggest the smartest next step (broader dates, nearby airports, allow 1 stop, adjust time window, try “anywhere” discovery, or switch to hotels-first for trip planning).
  • For failures other than lack of results, suggest using https://skiplagged.com directly.

5) Output style (traveler-centric)

Be concise and practical:

  • Highlight savings, routing insights, and key tradeoffs (stops vs duration vs price).
  • Present a short shortlist (typically 3–7 options) rather than a dump of results.

Tool discovery (required, safer across deployments)

Different deployments may rename tools or add new ones. Before running any workflow:

  1. List tools available on the connected Skiplagged MCP server.
  2. Identify the best match for each capability:
    • flights search
    • flexible date calendars
    • anywhere destinations
    • hotels search
    • hotel details
    • (optional) rental cars

Mapping convention (typical, not guaranteed): tools often start with sk_.

Common capability → typical tool names (use as a guide)

  • Flights search → sk_flights_search
  • Flexible departure calendar → sk_flex_departure_calendar
  • Flexible return calendar → sk_flex_return_calendar
  • Anywhere destination discovery → sk_destinations_anywhere
  • Hotels search → sk_hotels_search
  • Hotel details → sk_hotel_details

If your tool list differs, use the closest equivalent and keep the workflows below unchanged.


Intake checklist (ask only what’s needed)

Extract or confirm only the missing critical inputs:

  • Route intent: specific route (origin -> destination) vs flexible destination (“anywhere”).
  • Dates: exact dates or flexible window + trip length.
  • Travelers: adults/children/infants and cabin, if non-default.
  • Constraints: budget, stops, max duration, time windows, and airline preferences.
  • Lodging intent (if relevant): hotel location, dates, guests, and required amenities.

Workflows

Workflow A — Standard flight search (one-way or round-trip)

Use when the user wants specific flights between places.

Preferred tool → fallback

  • Preferred: sk_flights_search

Steps

  1. Normalize locations:
    • If user gives a city/region, clarify which airport(s) are acceptable if it changes results materially (multi-airport metros).
  2. Call the flight-search tool with:
    • origin, destination
    • depart date (+ return date if round-trip)
    • passenger counts, cabin - assume defaults if not specified
    • only the filters the user asked for (stops, time windows, airline preferences)
  3. Post-process:
    • Cluster top results by cheapest, fastest, fewest stops.
    • Present 3–7 options with price, stops, duration, and any standout caveats (overnight layover, long layover).
  4. If results are too broad:
    • Ask 1 targeted question (e.g., “Allow one stop?”) or apply a reasonable default and disclose it.

Workflow B — Flexible dates / fare calendar

Use when the user says “around X date”, “flexible”, or “cheapest days”.

Preferred tools → fallback

  • Preferred: sk_flex_departure_calendar and sk_flex_return_calendar

Steps

  1. Call the departure-calendar tool around the target date/window.
  2. If round-trip:
    • Use a trip length (or return window) that matches the user’s intent (e.g., “3–5 nights”).
    • Call the return-calendar tool for best return dates.
  3. Summarize:
    • Cheapest departure day(s)
    • Cheapest round-trip date pairs (if supported)
    • Recommend 2–4 date options aligned to constraints (weekends, time windows, budget).

Workflow C — “Anywhere” destination discovery

Use when the user is flexible on where to go (“somewhere warm”, “anywhere cheap”).

Preferred tool → fallback

  • Preferred: sk_destinations_anywhere

Steps

  1. Confirm:
    • origin
    • date/window (or month)
    • constraints (budget, max flight time, nonstop-only, region/climate)
  2. Call the anywhere-destinations tool.
  3. Return 5–12 destinations with:
    • destination, lowest fare, suggested dates/window (as returned)
    • a one-line rationale tied to the user constraints
  4. When the user picks a destination, transition to Workflow A to find bookable itineraries.

Workflow D — Hotels + room-level details

Use when the user asks for hotels, places to stay, or wants to bundle planning.

Preferred tools → fallback

  • Preferred: sk_hotels_search then sk_hotel_details
  • Fallback: any tool(s) that provide hotel lists and separate room/policy breakdowns

Steps

  1. Call the hotel-search tool with:
    • location, dates, rooms/guests
    • only requested filters (price cap, rating, amenities)
  2. Present 5–10 options with:
    • total price / nightly price (as returned), rating, key amenities, and area/neighborhood (if returned)
  3. When the user selects a hotel (or asks for “best value”), call the hotel-details tool.
  4. Summarize room options:
    • room type, cancellation policy, inclusions (breakfast), total price (as returned)
    • highlight tradeoffs: nonrefundable vs flexible, fees, value differences.

Workflow E — Rental cars (if available)

Use when the user requests a car rental.

Preferred tool → fallback

  • Preferred: a tool in the server tool list whose description indicates car-rental search

Steps

  1. Confirm pickup/dropoff location, times, and any constraints (car class, driver age if required).
  2. Call the car-rental search tool (if present).
  3. Present 3–7 options with total price, class, company, and relevant policies (as returned).

Planning behavior (for full itineraries)

When the user asks to “plan a trip”:

  1. Anchor with flights (or anywhere discovery) to set destination/dates/cost.
  2. Add hotels for the chosen destination/dates.
  3. Add rental cars if needed and supported.
  4. Present 2–3 bundles (e.g., “cheapest”, “balanced”, “most convenient”) with clear tradeoffs.

Reliability + transparency notes

  • Prices and availability change quickly; treat results as current at the moment of the tool call and encourage the user to confirm terms via the provided link (if any).
  • If hidden-city itineraries appear, be transparent about common constraints and tradeoffs (especially baggage and missed-leg implications). Do not oversell—present as an option with clear caveats.

Troubleshooting (avoid loops)

  • If a call fails or returns empty results:
    • Retry at most once with broader constraints (e.g., allow 1 stop, widen time window, nearby airports).
    • If still empty, ask one targeted follow-up question and propose a concrete alternative search.

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