No public API. Dollar Flight Club is a consumer flight-alert subscription with no developer portal, endpoints, webhooks, or RSS feed. The only partner surface is an affiliate program built on discount codes, not data access.
Dollar Flight Club scores F on the API Report Card. No public API. Dollar Flight Club is a consumer flight-alert subscription with no developer portal, endpoints, webhooks, or RSS feed. The only partner surface is an affiliate program built on discount codes, not data access.
Without a usable official API, teams fall back on manual exports, file drops, or one-off vendor integrations. The other option is an unofficial API layer like Supergood that automates the authenticated web app directly.
Dollar Flight Club is a Seattle-based consumer travel-alert subscription that emails and SMS-alerts members about cheap domestic and international flights, including economy, premium economy, business, and mistake fares, departing from the member's selected home airport(s).
Vertical: Consumer Travel / Flight Deals (no Supergood ICP fit, mapped to 'misc'). Member signs up via dollarflightclub.com or Typeform-driven landing pages and selects up to 5 home airports (Premium) plus trip preferences.
Medium-low within the niche consumer flight-deal-alert subcategory, negligible everywhere else.
Dollar Flight Club holds very little 'platform-critical' operating data for any third party: Member account: email, phone (for SMS), up to 5 home airport codes, trip-region/season preferences, cabin-class preference, notification frequency.
Founded 2016 by Jesse Neugarten. 10 years old as of 2026.
No public API exists, so there are no API-specific complaints to surface, and no developer community to file them. No documented webhook for new-deal events; competing free services (Secret Flying, The Flight Deal) publish RSS feeds, which Dollar Flight Club does not. Full sourced list under Sources below.
Common alternatives include Going (formerly Scott's Cheap Flights), Thrifty Traveler, Jack's Flight Club, FareDrop, Next Vacay, Matt's Flights. Graded alternatives appear under "More from the report card" below.
Grades measure one thing: can a customer's engineering team get their own data out programmatically? We check six things (whether a real API exists, how access is gated, data coverage, auth quality, docs and developer experience, and stability) and roll them into a letter grade. Grades get re-verified, and they only move on evidence.