Duo Booking

A duo booking brings two companions together for the same client at the same time, rather than the standard one-on-one arrangement — a distinct dynamic that requires more coordination on the booking side than a typical visit.

What's typically included

In a duo booking, both companions are present for the same client throughout the time together, rather than one covering part of the booking and the other covering the rest. The two companions might already work together regularly and offer duo bookings as a standing option, or a client might request a specific pairing by contacting two companions separately and coordinating with both. Either way, the experience is built around the three-person dynamic rather than being two separate one-on-one bookings happening side by side.

How pricing works

Pricing for a duo booking generally reflects both companions' individual rates rather than a single discounted combined price — the client is effectively booking two people's time simultaneously. Some pairs who regularly offer duo bookings together may have a set combined rate listed on their profiles, while others calculate it by adding their individual rates. It's worth confirming the total upfront rather than assuming a discount applies just because it's a joint booking.

Who it suits

Duo bookings suit clients who are specifically looking for that three-person dynamic, rather than clients who'd be equally satisfied with a standard one-on-one booking. Because the appeal is particular to that setup, it's not typically treated as an upgrade or add-on to a normal booking — companions who offer it usually frame it as its own distinct category with its own expectations.

How booking usually works

Arranging a duo booking generally takes more coordination than a standard visit, since it involves aligning two companions' schedules (and, if they don't already work together, introducing them to each other ahead of time). This means duo bookings typically need to be arranged further in advance than a same-day single booking, and cancellations or changes can be more disruptive simply because more people's time is involved.

What to expect

Expect a dynamic shaped by three people rather than two, which changes the pacing and feel of the time together compared to a standard booking. Companions who regularly offer duo bookings together tend to have an established rapport that makes the interaction feel natural rather than staged; pairs booking together for the first time may take a little longer to find that same ease. Being clear about what you're hoping for from the dynamic — rather than assuming it will unfold identically to a one-on-one booking — helps set the right expectations from the start.

A note on comfort levels

Because a duo booking involves an additional person's comfort and boundaries alongside the client's, it's reasonable to expect a slightly more thorough conversation before booking than a standard visit, covering what all three people are comfortable with. This isn't a sign of anything being complicated — it's simply part of making sure everyone involved is on the same page.

Communication during the booking

Once underway, a duo booking benefits from the same kind of active communication that a couples booking does — checking in periodically rather than assuming the initial arrangement covers everything that follows. Because three people's comfort is in play throughout, companions experienced in duo bookings tend to be attentive to pacing and to how the dynamic between all three people is developing, not just their own individual interaction with the client.