Discover complete routes
Search and browse public trips with destinations, day counts, stops, and traveler context.
Travel itinerary planner
Trace helps you plan travel from real itineraries, not another blank spreadsheet. Instead of starting with scattered tabs, you can discover routes from friends and travelers you trust, copy the full structure, and then adapt it to your dates, group, pace, and booking details.
Most travelers plan across blogs, maps, Instagram saves, booking confirmations, Reddit threads, spreadsheets, and group chats. Each source is useful, but none of them gives the full route. Trace is built around complete trips: days, stops, destinations, and the decisions that make a plan work in real life.
When you find an itinerary in Trace, you can use it as a base instead of a loose recommendation. Copy the route, remove what does not fit, add your own places, and keep the booking details attached to the relevant day or stop. The result is a travel plan that your group can actually follow.
Search and browse public trips with destinations, day counts, stops, and traveler context.
Start from a route that already worked, then adapt it without losing the original planning logic.
Keep confirmations, passes, tickets, and notes connected to the itinerary as the trip moves from planning to live travel.
Trace is useful before the trip, while the group is deciding, and once the itinerary becomes the thing you actually follow. At the beginning, it helps you compare possible routes by looking at real trips instead of isolated search results. During planning, it gives the group a shared structure for what happens on each day. When bookings start arriving, the itinerary becomes the place where those details make sense.
That matters because travel plans are rarely finished in one sitting. Someone finds a better restaurant, a flight changes, a museum needs an advance ticket, or a friend joins late and needs to understand the plan quickly. A Trace itinerary keeps the route readable as those details change. The goal is not to make every traveler follow a rigid template; it is to preserve the useful context behind the plan so each decision has somewhere to live.
For searchers comparing itinerary tools, the practical difference is that Trace starts with social proof and real route structure. You can still personalize everything, but the first draft is based on a trip someone actually took or planned carefully. That makes Trace especially useful for travelers who want recommendations from people, not just ranked lists of attractions.
A useful travel itinerary should answer the questions travelers ask once inspiration becomes logistics: where are we sleeping, what happens each day, how far apart are the stops, what needs a ticket, what can be skipped, and who has the confirmation. Trace keeps those answers close to the route. That makes the itinerary easier to scan before departure and easier to trust while traveling.
No. Trace works for weekend breaks, city trips, multi-country routes, and larger group holidays.
Yes. Public or shared itineraries can become the starting point for your own plan.
Trace organizes your plan and booking details. You can book wherever you usually book, then keep the information in Trace.