Invite the group
Bring travelers into the same planning space instead of chasing decisions across chat threads.
Group trip planner
Group travel breaks when the plan lives in five places: one person has the hotel booking, another saved restaurants, someone else has flight times, and the best recommendations are buried in chat. Trace gives the group a shared itinerary that starts from real routes and stays organized as plans change.
A group trip is not just a destination and dates. It is preferences, budgets, arrival times, saved places, bookings, and decisions that change as people respond. Trace helps by giving the group a concrete route to discuss. You can copy a public itinerary, adapt it to your group, and keep the plan understandable for everyone.
Because Trace is built around itineraries rather than isolated notes, every important detail can live near the part of the trip where it matters. Accommodation stays with the destination, tickets stay near the activity, and the route gives the group a shared mental model.
Bring travelers into the same planning space instead of chasing decisions across chat threads.
Use a complete public trip as the foundation, then edit it together.
Attach confirmations, passes, and notes where the group needs them.
The hard part of a group trip is not usually finding one good place. It is keeping everyone aligned on the route, the timing, the tradeoffs, and the details that affect the whole group. A good restaurant recommendation is helpful, but it becomes much more useful when the group can see which day it belongs to, what is nearby, and whether it fits the pace of the trip.
Trace gives every traveler a clearer view of the plan. A late joiner can open the itinerary and understand the route without scrolling through weeks of messages. The person holding the hotel confirmation can keep it near the stay. The friend who found a great day trip can add it to the relevant destination. The plan becomes a shared object instead of a long negotiation scattered across apps.
For groups copying a trip from someone they trust, this is especially powerful. The copied itinerary gives the group a real first draft: where to go, how many days to spend, and what kind of stops made sense. From there, the group can edit intentionally instead of debating from a blank page.
Group travel often fails in small moments: someone misses a booking link, the meeting point changes, or a saved place never makes it into the final plan. Trace reduces that overhead by putting the route and the details in the same shared itinerary. People can still talk, vote, and change their minds, but the latest version of the trip remains visible and organized.
That makes the plan easier to trust when the trip starts, because every traveler can open the same source instead of asking who has the latest link.
Trace is designed to keep the itinerary, route, and booking context together in a travel-first interface.
Groups can adapt copied itineraries to their own dates and preferences.
The current website invites travelers to request early beta access; no payment claim is made here.