The best travel app for 2026 depends on what you're trying to do. If you discover places on social media (TikTok, Instagram, YouTube), Plotline is the strongest pick — share a post, get every place pinned on your map. For collaborative itinerary building, Wanderlog is the gold standard. For booking and confirmation tracking, TripIt. For navigation on the ground, Google Maps. The 12 apps below cover every part of the modern travel workflow, ranked by how well they do their specific job.
More than 10,000 travelers have used Plotline to map over 500,000 places from 100,000+ social media posts.
TL;DR — the right app for each job
| Job | Best app | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Save TikToks & Reels to a map | Plotline | One-tap share, multi-place extraction, every platform |
| Build a collaborative trip plan | Wanderlog | Mature itinerary builder, web + mobile, free tier |
| Save places you find anywhere | Google Maps | Free, reliable, custom lists, works offline |
| Curate a personal tagged map | Mapstr | Beautiful tagging-first design |
| iOS-native saved places | Apple Maps | Guides feature, deep iOS integration |
| AI itinerary from social | Triply | Import from Instagram/TikTok, AI day plans |
| Track flight & hotel confirmations | TripIt | Forwards your bookings into one organized itinerary |
| Travel journal & memory | Polarsteps | Auto-tracks your route, beautiful trip recaps |
| Find cheap flights | Hopper | Price predictions and last-minute deals |
| "How do I get from A to B" | Rome2Rio | Multi-modal trip routing (planes, trains, buses) |
| TikTok-only saving | Stashed | Lightweight TikTok-specific extractor |
| Instagram DM-to-map | Map Your Voyage | DM Reels for country bucket lists |
How we ranked these
This list is built from real testing across iOS and the web over the past several months. We prioritized:
- Does it actually solve a real travel-planning problem (not just look pretty)?
- How much friction exists between "I want to do this" and "it's done"?
- Does it stand alone, or do you need three apps duct-taped together?
- Real free tier vs. paywall-locked-after-1-trip.
Honest note: Plotline is our app. We've ranked it where we believe it genuinely belongs based on what it does well (turning social media saves into a real map) and have flagged the things it doesn't do as well as the alternatives (auto-itinerary generation is still in beta; iOS only).
The 12 best travel apps for 2026
Plotline
Share a TikTok, Reel, YouTube video, or Google Maps link — get a real travel map.
Plotline solves the single most universal travel-planning problem of 2026: hundreds of travel videos saved on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube that never become real trips. Open a post, hit share, select Plotline, and every place mentioned in the video gets pinned to your personal travel map with the right category. A 30-minute "3 days in Tokyo" YouTube vlog can yield 25+ mappable places. A "Top 5 cafes in Paris" Reel becomes 5 separate pins.
It also imports Google Maps saved lists (you share the list URL, Plotline imports every place at once — nothing else does this), and pulls places from travel blog posts. Everything lives on one map, organized into Collections by destination or theme.
Wanderlog
The gold standard for collaborative trip planning.
Wanderlog has been the default for serious trip planning since 2018. Strong web + mobile experience, excellent itinerary builder with day-by-day structure, collaborative editing for trips with friends, and a generous free tier. If you already know your destinations and want to organize a multi-day plan with hotels, flights, restaurants, and activities in one place, this is still the best option.
The gap: Wanderlog doesn't auto-extract from social media. You'll find a Reel of a Bangkok cafe, then manually search for it inside Wanderlog and add it. Fine for 10 places, painful for 200.
Google Maps
The map you already use, with a saved-lists feature most people forget exists.
Google Maps' Lists feature is genuinely underrated. Create a list called "Italy 2026," drop pins as you find places, then use those pins for navigation when you actually arrive. It's free, works offline, and integrates with the navigation app you'll use anyway. Plus Google Maps' place data is the most accurate available.
The catch: Lists are flat (no categories beyond the list itself), there's no day-by-day itinerary view, and you can't auto-import from social media. It's a great storage layer but not a planning layer.
Mapstr
A beautifully tagged personal map of every place you've ever wanted to visit.
Mapstr is built around tagging. You add a place, tag it (#italy2026, #cafe, #anniversary), color-code it, attach notes. The result is a personal world map of your taste — a lifelong artifact, not just a trip-by-trip tool. It has a small but devoted following among foodies and serial travelers.
Like Google Maps Lists, it's manual entry. You won't escape the saved-folder backlog with it, but for the places you do add, the experience is the best of any map-curation app.
Apple Maps
Quietly excellent if you live deep in the Apple ecosystem.
Apple Maps has improved significantly over the past few years. The Guides feature lets you save places into curated lists, share them with friends, and sync across all your Apple devices. If you're using a Mac, iPhone, and iPad together, the cross-device experience is the smoothest of any maps app.
Coverage is still uneven outside major cities, and the social-discovery layer (extracting places from posts) doesn't exist. But for iOS-only travelers who want something that "just works" without leaving native apps, it's a solid foundation.
Triply
An AI-first travel planner that imports from Instagram and TikTok.
Triply leans hard into AI-generated itineraries. You connect your saved Instagram and TikTok content, and Triply builds suggested day-by-day trips. The AI quality is genuinely good for popular destinations; less reliable for off-the-beaten-path places where the model has less training data.
The tradeoff: Triply is more "AI does it for you" than "you stay in control," which some travelers love and others find limiting. Plotline takes the opposite approach — extract the places, let you arrange them.
TripIt
Forward your confirmation emails. TripIt builds the itinerary.
TripIt has had the same job for over a decade and still does it better than anything: you forward your hotel, flight, and rental car confirmation emails to a TripIt address, and it pulls out the relevant details (dates, addresses, confirmation numbers) and assembles a clean trip itinerary you can pull up offline. It's pure organization, no discovery.
If you book a lot of bookings (or travel with a partner who books some), TripIt is the easiest way to keep the logistics straight. Pair it with a discovery tool like Plotline.
Polarsteps
Auto-tracks your route. Builds a beautiful map of every trip you've ever taken.
Polarsteps is for after the trip more than during. You turn it on at the start of a trip, and it passively tracks your location, photos, and route. At the end, you get a gorgeous animated map of your journey, plus a printable photo book if you want it. It's become a quiet favorite among travelers who want to remember their trips long-term.
Not really a planning tool. But it pairs well with planning tools — plan with Plotline, journal with Polarsteps.
Hopper
Predicts when fares will drop. Tells you when to book.
Hopper's core feature is fare prediction: enter a route, and it tells you whether prices are likely to drop or rise. It's saved travelers real money on flights and hotels over the years. The app has expanded into broader booking (hotels, cars), with mixed reviews on the non-flight side. Stick with it for flights.
Rome2Rio
"How do I get from Barcelona to Marrakech?" Rome2Rio knows.
Rome2Rio answers the unglamorous-but-essential question: given two points anywhere in the world, what are all the ways to get between them? Flights, trains, buses, ferries, drives — with rough prices and times. It's the planning tool you reach for when figuring out whether to add a city stop to your itinerary.
Stashed
Lightweight TikTok-to-map extraction.
Stashed focuses narrowly on TikTok travel saves. Paste a TikTok URL and it extracts places to an interactive map. If your travel discovery happens primarily on TikTok and you don't need multi-platform support, it does its one job well.
The narrow focus is the limitation too. If you also save from Instagram, YouTube, or Google Maps, you'll end up with three disconnected maps instead of one. See our Plotline vs Stashed comparison.
Map Your Voyage
DM Instagram Reels to a workflow that maps them into country bucket lists.
Map Your Voyage's signature feature is the DM workflow: instead of installing an app, you DM Reels to their linked Instagram account, and it processes them into country-specific bucket lists and itineraries. It's a clever workaround for people who don't want another app on their phone.
The free tier covers 30 DMs/month, which most casual savers will exceed quickly. Web-based output (no native iOS app) feels slower than share-sheet flows.
How to actually combine these
Most serious travelers in 2026 use 2-3 of these apps together. A reasonable stack:
- Discovery + Map: Plotline (every time you see a Reel/TikTok/YouTube video worth saving)
- Itinerary & Collaboration: Wanderlog (if you're planning with someone else) or Plotline Premiere (solo)
- Bookings: TripIt (forward your confirmations as they come in)
- Flights: Hopper (set fare watches a few months out)
- On the ground: Google Maps (navigation; your Plotline pins are also exportable to Maps)
- After the trip: Polarsteps (the memory layer)
The single biggest workflow improvement of 2026 is the discovery layer. Five years ago, travel planning meant guidebooks and travel blogs; now it's TikTok and Instagram. The apps that didn't adapt to that shift (most traditional planners) feel increasingly creaky. The ones that did — Plotline, Triply, Stashed — are where most of the interesting work is happening.
FAQ
What's the best travel app for 2026?
Plotline if you discover travel content on social media (TikTok, Instagram, YouTube). Wanderlog if you're collaboratively planning trips with friends. Google Maps if you want a free, reliable foundation. Most travelers benefit from combining 2-3 of these.
What's the best free travel planning app?
Plotline is free to download and includes core saving and organizing features. Wanderlog has a generous free tier for traditional planning. Google Maps is free and reliable for basic place saving via custom lists.
What's the best app for travel itineraries?
Wanderlog for traditional collaborative itineraries. Plotline Premiere builds itineraries from your saved places (auto-generation in beta). TripIt is best for organizing flight and hotel confirmations into an itinerary, not for choosing what to do.
What's the best app to save TikTok and Instagram travel places?
Plotline. It extracts places from TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube via the iOS share sheet and also imports Google Maps lists and blog posts. Stashed is a TikTok-only alternative. Pintra is a Reels-focused alternative.
Plotline vs Wanderlog — which one should I use?
Plotline if you're collecting travel inspiration from social media and want it auto-mapped. Wanderlog if you already have destinations and want a collaborative day-by-day planner. Many travelers use both: Plotline for capture, Wanderlog (or Plotline Premiere) for the itinerary.