UK-based travel company selling holidays to Asia collapses - with all tours and flights cancelled
Asiara UK Ltd ceased trading as an ATOL holder on January 21, 2026, the Civil Aviation Authority has announced.
All tours and flights with the company have been cancelled as a result.
It comes after the company, which ran tailor-made and small-group tours to countries including Thailand, China, India, Japan, and Singapore, dissolved earlier in the month.
On the Civil Aviation Authority’s ATOL failures page, it said the company - which is based in Ipswich - traded under the names Asiara Holidays and the website www.asiara-holidays.com.
ATOL guarantees customers receive refunds if a company collapses.
The company began as Haivenu Tours, with offices in Vietnam, before expanding in 2022 when it launched Asiara Holidays in the UK.
Asiara UK Ltd operated under a franchise arrangement with Protected Trust Services (PTS).

Asiara UK Ltd ceased trading as an Atol holder in January

The company ran tours to popular travel destinations, including Thailand
Consumers who require assistance regarding their booking should contact PTS directly.
Asiara is by no means the first travel company to go bust in recent months.
Last year, a UK travel company collapsed into liquidation after running for 55 years.
Ickenham Travel Group ceased trading as an ATOL holder on November 20, the CAA announced.
On the CAA’s ATOL failures page, it said the company - which is based in London - traded under the names Abu Dhabi Holidays, Ras Al Khaimah Holidays and Letsgo2.
Regen Central Ltd previously operated in Europe, South East Asia and the Middle East.
The company was founded in 2009 in Hertfordshire, specialising in package holidays.

Any travellers who have booked with the company should get in contact
But it went bust after 17 years of operation - and no refunds are set to be issued.
On the CAA’s ATOL failures page, it said Regen Central Ltd ceased trading as an Air Travel Organiser's Licence (ATOL) holder on January 13, 2026.
The company, based in London, also traded under the names One Haji and Umrah, Regen Travels and Oneworld Travels.
It also ran operations through its websites regentravels.com, oneworld-travels.com and onehajjumrah.com.