To import a Google Maps saved list into a trip planner, share the list link to Plotline — it automatically imports every place on the list and pins them on your travel map. From there, organize into collections and build itineraries. No manual re-entry, no exporting CSVs.
You've been using Google Maps as your travel planning system for years. Every time someone recommends a restaurant, you star it. Every time you read a "Best of Tokyo" article, you save five more places. You've got lists called "Want to Go," "Japan Trip," "NYC Restaurants," and that one simply labeled "Food" that has 200 pins across four continents.
And then you actually book a trip to Kyoto for three days, and you realize: you have 50 saved places scattered across Japan, and Google Maps gives you absolutely no way to figure out which ones are near each other, which are restaurants versus temples, or how to fit any of them into a three-day itinerary.
Your Google Maps saves are a goldmine of research. They're just trapped in a tool that was never built for trip planning.
Why Google Maps Lists Don't Work for Trip Planning
Google Maps is excellent at what it does — directions, reviews, business hours. But its saved lists feature was designed for bookmarking, not for organizing travel. The limitations become obvious the moment you try to plan a real trip from your saves.
- No categories — A saved list is flat. Your ramen shop, your boutique hotel, and the shrine you want to visit all sit in the same undifferentiated list. There's no way to filter by type.
- No day-by-day planning — You can't group places into Day 1, Day 2, Day 3. There's no concept of an itinerary, a schedule, or even a rough order of operations.
- No smart routing — Even if you manually pick five places for a day, Google Maps won't optimize the route for you in the context of a multi-stop itinerary. You're left dragging pins around and guessing.
- No separation between "visited" and "want to go" — That list of 200 restaurants? Some you've already been to. Some are aspirational. Google Maps doesn't know the difference.
- No neighborhood grouping — You can't see at a glance which saves are in Shibuya versus Shinjuku versus Asakusa. You'd have to zoom in and squint at overlapping pins.
- Limited collaboration — You can share a list, but there's no real collaborative planning. No comments, no voting, no way for a travel partner to add places and have them organized together.
Google Maps lists are a parking lot for places. What you need is a workshop where you can actually build a trip.
Why People Want to Move Their Google Maps Saves
The frustration usually hits at a specific moment: you're sitting down to plan a trip, you open Google Maps, and you realize that your years of diligent saving have produced a mess. The "Want to Go" list has 300 entries. Your trip-specific lists are incomplete because half the places are still in the default list. And you still can't answer the most basic planning question: "What should I do on Tuesday in Kyoto?"
People start looking for alternatives when they realize they need more than a list of pins. They need categories — which saves are restaurants, which are coffee shops, which are museums. They need geography — which saves are walking distance from each other. They need structure — an actual day-by-day plan, not just a cloud of dots on a map.
The problem is that most people have years of saves in Google Maps. Starting fresh in a new app feels impossible if it means manually re-entering every place. That's why the import step matters so much.
How to Import Google Maps Lists Into Plotline
Plotline reads Google Maps list links directly. You don't need to export a CSV, use a browser extension, or type anything by hand. Here's the process:
Step 1: Open Your Google Maps List
In Google Maps, go to Saved and open the list you want to import — "Want to Go," "Favorites," or any custom list you've created. This works with both default lists and custom ones.
Step 2: Share the List Link
Tap the share icon on the list to get a shareable link. Google Maps generates a URL that contains all the places on that list.
Step 3: Share to Plotline
Share that link to Plotline using the iOS share sheet, or paste it directly into the app. Plotline reads the list and imports every place on it — names, locations, and categories, all in one step.
Step 4: Organize Into Chapters
Once imported, your places appear as plot points on your personal travel map. Group them into "chapters" — collections like "Kyoto Day Trips," "Tokyo Restaurants," or "Japan 2026." A single place can belong to multiple chapters, so your favorite izakaya can live in both "Tokyo" and "Best Bars."
Step 5: See the Geography
This is where it clicks. Instead of a flat list, you see all your imported places on a real map — color-coded by category. Suddenly you can see that you have six coffee shops in Shimokitazawa, three temples in eastern Kyoto, and nothing planned for your last day in Osaka. The map reveals what the list hid.
Step 6: Build Your Itinerary
Select a date range and your imported places, and Plotline generates a route-optimized day-by-day itinerary. It groups nearby places together, accounts for travel time between stops, and fills gaps with recommendations that match what you already saved. Your years of Google Maps research become a real travel plan in minutes.
Other Ways to Import Google Maps Data (and the Trade-offs)
Plotline isn't the only option, but the alternatives come with significant friction:
- Wanderlog — Can import from Google Maps through a web clipper, but you need to create a trip first and the import is per-place rather than per-list. Good tool, but the import workflow is heavier.
- Manual re-entry — Search for each place in your new app and add it. This works for 10 places. It doesn't work for 200. Most people give up halfway through.
- Google Takeout + CSV — You can export your Google Maps data through Google Takeout, which gives you a GeoJSON file. Then you'd need to convert it, clean it, and find an app that accepts CSV imports. This is a developer workflow, not a travel planning workflow. Most people won't do this.
- Keep using Google Maps — Plenty of people just stay. They work around the limitations by creating more and more lists, adding emoji prefixes to place names for pseudo-categories, and planning itineraries in a separate Google Doc. It works, but it's held together with tape.
When You Should Import Your Google Maps Lists
Not everyone needs to move off Google Maps. If you save a handful of places and plan trips casually, Google Maps lists are fine. But there are clear moments when importing makes sense:
- You have years of saves that need organizing — If your "Want to Go" list has more than 50 places across multiple countries, you've outgrown the tool. Importing into Plotline gives you categories, geography, and structure.
- You're actively planning a trip — When you're three weeks out from a trip and need to turn 40 saved places into a five-day itinerary, Google Maps can't help you. Import the relevant list and build a real plan.
- You want to combine sources — Maybe half your saves are in Google Maps and the other half are in your TikTok saved folder and Instagram collections. Plotline handles all of these through the same share sheet, so you end up with one unified map instead of three disconnected lists.
- You're switching to a dedicated trip planner — If you've decided that Google Maps lists aren't cutting it, the import is the bridge. You don't lose your research — you just move it somewhere that can actually use it.
Your Saves Deserve Better Than a List
Every place you've ever starred on Google Maps represents a moment of genuine interest — a restaurant a friend raved about, a hotel you saw in a blog post, a park that looked perfect for a morning walk. Those saves are valuable. They're your travel taste, accumulated over years.
The problem was never the saving. The problem is that Google Maps gave you no way to do anything with what you saved. Importing your lists into a real trip planner is the step that turns years of passive bookmarking into active trip planning. Your saves finally become useful — not someday, but for your next trip.