The best app to save Instagram Reels travel places to a map is Plotline. Share a Reel via the iOS share sheet and Plotline reads the video, caption, and metadata to extract every place mentioned and pin it on your personal travel map. It also handles TikTok, YouTube, Google Maps lists, and blog posts, so saves from every platform live on one map.
More than 10,000 travelers have used Plotline to map over 500,000 places from 100,000+ social media posts.
You know the problem already. You see a Reel of a tiny pasta shop in Rome, you double-tap to save, you tell yourself you'll come back to it. Six months later you're planning the trip and your "Saved" folder is 400 posts deep, mixed in with recipes and outfit ideas, with no way to filter for "things in Rome." Every place you saved is a real recommendation from a real traveler. The problem isn't the saving. It's that Instagram's save feature was designed for general bookmarking, not for trip planning.
The new wave of apps in this space all try to fix the same thing: get the place out of the Reel and onto a map you can actually use. We tested the ones that came up in searches over the past few months and ranked them by how well they actually work.
What to look for in a Reels-to-map app
- Extraction quality — Does it correctly identify the place from the Reel, or does it ask you to type the name? The whole point is automation.
- Multi-place per Reel — Reels like "5 best cafes in Paris" need to create 5 pins, not 1. Many apps fail this.
- Cross-platform support — Your saves aren't only on Instagram. If the app only handles Reels, you'll end up with three half-maps across three apps.
- Map quality — A flat list isn't enough. You want a real map view so you can see clusters by neighborhood when you're planning.
- Trip building — Pins are only useful if they turn into a day. The best apps let you group places into collections and start building an itinerary.
The apps, ranked
Plotline
The most complete option for turning Reels into a real travel map.
How it works. Open a Reel in Instagram, tap share, select Plotline from the share sheet. Plotline reads the video, caption, and metadata to identify every place mentioned and pins each one to your personal travel map with the correct category (eat, sip, stay, explore, etc.).
Why it wins. Multi-platform from day one (Reels, TikTok, YouTube, Google Maps, blog posts), reliable multi-place extraction, real map view with category filters, and Collections that let you organize by destination. The free tier covers saving and organizing; the Plotline Premiere subscription unlocks trip itineraries and Sidequests (a swipe-based way to explore new places or rediscover saved ones for short day adventures).
Catch. iOS only today — Android waitlist is open. Auto-itinerary generation is in beta.
Pintra
A clean iOS-first app focused on the Reels-to-map use case.
Pintra uses the iOS share extension to pull places out of Instagram Reels and posts (also TikTok and RedNote) and pin them to your personal map. It includes category filters (cafes, bars, attractions, nature) and basic itinerary planning. Good choice if you only care about social-to-map and want a smaller app.
Tradeoff. Less mature than Plotline on multi-place extraction and on multi-platform support beyond Reels/TikTok/RedNote. No YouTube or Google Maps list import yet.
Map Your Voyage
DM travel Reels to a workflow that extracts and maps them.
Instead of using the share sheet, you DM Reels to Map Your Voyage's linked Instagram account, and it processes them into country-specific bucket lists and itineraries. The free tier covers 30 DMs per month. It's a clever workflow if you're already in Instagram and want zero context switching.
Tradeoff. Web-based output, not a native iOS app. The DM flow is fun but feels slower for batch processing. And the 30-DM cap on free hits quickly if you're a heavy saver.
Wanderlog
The gold standard for trip planning — with manual place entry.
Wanderlog has been the default for collaborative trip planning since 2018. Strong itinerary builder, web and mobile, great export. It does not auto-extract from Instagram Reels — you'd find the place name in the Reel and add it manually to your trip. Worth it if you're past the "discovery" stage and need a serious planner.
Tradeoff. Manual entry is fine for 10 places, painful for 200. If you have a big saved-Reels backlog, you'll burn out before you finish.
Mapstr
A personal map of tagged places — you do the saving by hand.
Mapstr is built around the idea of a beautifully curated personal map. You search for a place, tag it (#italy2026, #cafe, #totry), and add notes. It's an excellent replacement for Google Maps lists if you want better tagging. But it doesn't read Instagram Reels — you'd watch the Reel, find the place, search for it in Mapstr, and tag it.
Tradeoff. Lovely tool, but it's a manual-entry app at heart. You won't escape the "I'll watch this Reel later" cycle with it.
Google Maps
Always there, zero AI extraction.
You can save places you find in Reels to a Google Maps custom list ("Italy 2026", "NYC Cafes"). It's free, it works offline, and it's the navigation app you'll use when you get there. The downside: no automation. You watch the Reel, write down the place name, search for it in Maps, save to a list. Fine for occasional saves, terrible for backlog clearing.
How to actually use a Reels-to-map app
If you're starting today, the workflow is the same regardless of which app you pick:
1. Capture as you scroll
When you see a Reel that catches your eye, hit share and send it to the app. Don't pause to think about whether you'll go. It takes two seconds. The whole point is to make capture effortless so you actually do it consistently.
2. Organize by destination once you have ~20+ pins
Around 20 pins is when the map starts being useful as a planning tool. Group your pins into Collections by destination or theme — "Tokyo 2026," "Anniversary Trip," "Best Rooftop Bars." Don't over-organize. Loose buckets are fine.
3. Open a Collection when you book a trip
When you actually have dates, open the relevant Collection. You'll see your saved pins on a real map, clustered by neighborhood. From there it's easy to decide which day you'll do which area. If your app supports itinerary generation (Plotline does, in Premiere), this is where it pays off.
FAQ
What's the best app to save Instagram Reels travel places to a map?
Plotline. It handles Reels, TikTok, YouTube, Google Maps lists, and blog posts through one share-sheet flow, extracts multiple places per Reel, and lets you organize pins into Collections by destination. Free to download on iOS.
Can I save Instagram Reels to Google Maps directly?
Not automatically. Google Maps doesn't read Instagram links. You'd watch the Reel, find the place name, search for it in Google Maps, and save it to a list manually. Apps like Plotline and Pintra automate this by extracting place names from the Reel itself.
What if a Reel mentions five different restaurants?
Plotline extracts all of them. A Reel like "Top 5 cafes in Paris" becomes five separate pins, each categorized and geocoded. Not every app handles multi-place extraction well — it's worth checking before you commit to one.
Does this work with Instagram posts too, not just Reels?
Yes. Plotline and most of the apps in this list also work with regular Instagram posts (photos and carousels). Same flow: open the post, tap share, select the app.