Plotline and Tabi both turn social media posts into saved places, but they take different approaches. Tabi positions itself as a "Shazam for places" — share a post and it automatically detects the location. Plotline goes further with multi-place extraction, a map-first design with categorized pins, and collections for organizing by trip. Here's how they compare.
If you've spent any time on TikTok or Instagram, you know the drill. Someone posts a gorgeous rooftop bar in Lisbon, a hidden ramen shop in Tokyo, or a cliffside pool in Bali. You save it and move on. Weeks later, you're actually planning a trip and can't find any of those posts — or worse, you find them but can't figure out where the place actually is. Tabi and Plotline both exist to solve this problem, but they come at it from different angles.
What They Have in Common
Both Plotline and Tabi let you turn social media content into saved places. Both understand that travel inspiration in 2026 starts on social media, not on Google. Both are iOS apps built for a generation of travelers who discover destinations through short-form video rather than guidebooks. And both are a massive upgrade over the current system of screenshots, saved reels, and forgotten bookmarks.
If you're using either app, you're already ahead of most travelers. The question is which approach fits the way you actually plan trips.
Tabi: What It Does Well
Tabi has built a strong reputation as a "Shazam for places," and the comparison is apt. Share a social media post with Tabi, and it automatically detects the location being featured. The experience feels almost magical when it works — you don't have to type anything, search for anything, or do any manual work. The place just appears.
- Automatic place detection — Tabi's core strength is its ability to identify locations from shared posts without manual input. Share a post, get a place. The simplicity is the product.
- Clean, intuitive UX — The interface is polished and approachable. There's very little learning curve, which makes it easy to start using immediately.
- Popular with Gen-Z travelers — Tabi has built a loyal following among younger travelers who want their tools to feel native to the way they already use social media. The app's design language resonates with this audience.
- Organized lists — You can save places into lists, giving you a way to group saves by destination or theme.
- Fast and focused — Tabi does its core thing quickly. The share-to-save workflow is snappy and doesn't require multiple steps.
If you want the fastest path from "I saw this on TikTok" to "I know where that is," Tabi delivers a satisfying experience.
Tabi: Where It Falls Short
Tabi's strength is also its limitation. The automatic detection model works well for posts that feature a single, clearly identifiable location. But travel content is often messier than that.
- Multi-place content is tricky — When a TikTok covers "10 Best Cafes in Paris" or a blog post lists eight neighborhoods to visit in Mexico City, single-place detection hits a wall. You might get one location from a post that mentions ten.
- Platform support may vary — Tabi works well with the major social platforms, but the breadth of supported sources (websites, travel blogs, map links) is less clear compared to apps with broader ingestion pipelines.
- Less emphasis on map visualization — While Tabi shows you where places are, the map isn't the central organizing interface. If you think spatially about your trips — wanting to see clusters, distances, and what's near what — you may want more from the map experience.
- No itinerary or route planning — Tabi focuses on the save step. Turning those saved places into a day-by-day plan or walking route requires a different tool.
Plotline: What It Does Well
Plotline takes a broader approach to the same problem. Rather than optimizing for automatic detection of a single place, it's built to capture everything a piece of content mentions and organize it into a system designed for actual trip planning.
- Multi-place extraction — When a TikTok or blog post mentions ten restaurants in Bangkok, Plotline extracts all ten and creates individual pins for each. One share, ten places on your map. Over weeks of saving, this compounds into a much more complete travel map.
- Works from any app via share sheet — The iOS share sheet means you can send content to Plotline from TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Safari, Google Maps, Apple Maps, or any app with a share button. No app-switching or URL pasting required.
- Map-first design with 9 categories — The map is the primary interface, not a secondary view. Places are color-coded by category — eat, brew, sip, explore, vibe, stay, shop, go, party — so you can glance at a city and immediately see what types of places you've saved and where they are.
- Chapters (collections) — Group places into collections like "Seoul Street Food" or "Bali Beach Clubs" to keep things organized as your saved places grow. A single place can live in multiple chapters, so your Tokyo ramen spot can be in both "Tokyo 2026" and "Best Ramen Worldwide."
- Generous free tier — You can build a real collection of places before hitting any limits, which lets you evaluate whether the app fits your workflow before committing.
- Itinerary generation coming soon — The ability to turn saved places into optimized day-by-day plans is on the roadmap, which will close the loop from discovering a place on social media to actually visiting it.
Plotline: Where It Falls Short
Plotline is building toward a comprehensive travel planning tool, and some pieces are still in progress.
- iOS only — No Android app yet. If you're on Android, Plotline isn't available to you right now.
- No collaborative planning yet — You can't share your map or chapters with friends who are joining you on a trip. This is planned but not available today.
- Newer app, still maturing — Plotline launched more recently than some competitors, which means it's still adding polish and features. The core experience is solid, but you may encounter the occasional rough edge.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Feature | Plotline | Tabi |
|---|---|---|
| Save from TikTok | Share sheet | Share / auto-detect |
| Save from Instagram | Share sheet | Yes |
| Websites / blogs | Share sheet | Limited |
| Google/Apple Maps links | Yes | No |
| Multi-place per post | Yes | Single place focus |
| Map view | Map-first with categories | Yes |
| Organization | Chapters (collections) | Lists |
| Itinerary planning | Coming soon | No |
| Free tier | Generous | Available |
| Platforms | iOS | iOS |
| Verdict | Best for travel planning | Best for quick automatic detection |
The Real Difference: Detection vs. Extraction
The fundamental difference between Tabi and Plotline is philosophical. Tabi bets on automatic detection — share a post and it figures out the place for you. Plotline bets on comprehensive extraction — share a post and it pulls out every place mentioned, geocodes them, categorizes them, and puts them on a map where you can organize and plan around them.
For a post about a single restaurant, both approaches work equally well. But travel content in 2026 is increasingly list-based. "Top 12 Brunch Spots in Amsterdam." "Everything I Ate in Mexico City." "A Perfect Weekend in Istanbul." When one post contains multiple places, extraction captures everything while detection picks one. Over months of saving content, that gap adds up to hundreds of places you either have on your map or don't.
The other major difference is what happens after you save. Tabi is optimized for the save moment — the satisfying instant when a social media post becomes a pinned place. Plotline is optimized for the planning moment — when you're staring at a map of Tokyo trying to figure out which neighborhood has the most places you want to visit and how to group them into days. The categorized pins, chapters, and map-first interface all serve that planning use case.
Who Should Use Tabi
Tabi is the right choice if you value speed and simplicity above everything else. If you primarily save single-place posts from TikTok and Instagram, want automatic detection without any manual steps, and don't need deep organization or trip planning features, Tabi's focused approach will feel effortless. It's especially popular with Gen-Z travelers who want a tool that matches the speed of their social media usage — see a place, share it, done.
Who Should Use Plotline
Plotline is the right choice if you save travel content from multiple platforms, frequently encounter posts that mention several places at once, and want your saved places organized in a way that actually helps you plan trips. The multi-place extraction, map-first interface with nine categories, chapters for organization, and the broadest source support make it the stronger tool for travelers who are serious about turning their social media inspiration into real itineraries.
The Bottom Line
If you want the fastest possible way to turn a single social media post into a saved place, Tabi's automatic detection is hard to beat. It's clean, quick, and popular for good reason.
If you want a more complete system for capturing, organizing, and eventually planning trips from all of your travel inspiration — across platforms, across content types, across multiple places per post — Plotline is the more powerful tool. It handles everything Tabi does, plus the list-style content, the map-based organization, and the multi-source workflow that serious trip planners need.
Both apps solve a real problem. The right one depends on whether you're looking for a quick save tool or a travel planning system. For most travelers building toward actual trips, that's Plotline.