Vacation photography is hitting new heights.

The luxury travel company Black Tomato has introduced a service called “Drone the World,” which sends a professional drone photographer to capture their clients’ adventures. The service is included in trips from $5,500 a person for a three-night itinerary, including flights, accommodations and excursions. Once home, travelers receive a three-minute edited video that features sweeping aerial footage of their trip. According to a co-founder, Tom Marchant, “It gives our guests a chance to see where they traveled from a brand-new perspective.”

The InterContinental David Tel Aviv just started a five-night honeymoon package (from $3,277) that counts a drone photo shoot among its array of offerings. And Shangri-La’s Hambantota Resort & Spa in Sri Lanka (rooms from $250) provides guests with the opportunity to fly a drone themselves or be filmed by one while engaging in a wide-range of on-site activities, including golfing and trapeze-flying. Footage is available on CD or via email for a $20 fee.

Back on the ground, travelers can forgo the ubiquitous selfie by booking through companies supplying high-quality shoots by professional photographers.

Katalina Mayorga, the founder of El Camino Travel, said she understood that we live in an image-driven world, but felt that travelers (herself included) too often sacrificed the present moment to capture the perfect Instagram-worthy photo. This led Ms. Mayorga to start a travel company for millennials that specializes in group itineraries to Latin America (from $2,050 a person). On each trip, she sends a professional photographer who shoots upward of 500 photos a day and delivers approximately 30 edited images each morning to the group, which they can immediately share on social media. “It’s a much different vibe when people are not always on their phones,” she said. “The experience becomes much more authentic.”