SRG Bottom Line
One-Line Verdict: Wanderlog is the trip organizer that finally replaces the spreadsheet — but it’s a manual builder, not an AI generator, so bring your own research.
What is Wanderlog?
Wanderlog (wanderlog.com) is a free travel planning app that launched in 2019 and has since become the most recommended free trip organizer in the r/travel community. Unlike TripGen or MonkeyTravel — which generate itineraries from a prompt — Wanderlog is a manual builder: you search for places, pin them to a Google Maps-based visual map, and drag them into a day-by-day schedule. What it builds around that core is genuinely impressive for a free product.
Real-time collaborative editing lets trip partners work on the same itinerary simultaneously. Gmail scanning pulls in flight, hotel, and restaurant confirmations automatically. Route optimization calculates the most efficient order for your daily stops. A budget tracker lets you log costs and split bills across a group. A Trip Journal feature lets you document the trip as it happens with photos and location logs.
At Smart Remote Gigs, I tested Wanderlog across three use cases: a road trip through Scotland, a multi-city Europe itinerary built collaboratively with a remote team, and a solo work trip to Chicago. It is, by a meaningful margin, the best free tool in the manual organization category. Its ceiling is that it won’t plan anything for you — if you want to drop in a destination and get an itinerary back, look at TripGen or Stardrift. But if you know what you want to do and need to organize, visualize, and share it cleanly, Wanderlog is the one.
🚀 Key Features for Freelancers
Map-First Visual Planning
Every place you add is immediately pinned on an embedded Google Maps view with route lines connecting your daily stops. For road trips, multi-neighborhood city days, or any trip where geographic logic matters, this spatial view catches routing inefficiencies that a list-based planner would miss entirely. Route optimization — available on Pro — automatically reorders stops to minimize drive time.
Real-Time Group Collaboration
Invite travel partners via email or link and everyone edits the same itinerary simultaneously, Google Docs-style. For remote workers organizing team offsites or friend groups building a shared trip, this is the most fully-featured free collaborative planning layer available — no voting delay, just live shared editing.
Gmail Reservation Import
Connect Gmail and Wanderlog automatically pulls flight, hotel, and restaurant confirmations into the correct trip. Forward a confirmation email manually and it parses the details without you doing data entry. For frequent travelers juggling bookings across multiple platforms, this kills the “dig through email at the airport” problem.
Budget Tracking and Bill Splitting
Add cost estimates to individual activities, set a total trip budget, and track spending against it. For group trips, the bill-splitting tool divides costs across participants. Manual entry only — no live price integration — but functional for keeping a running tally across a complex multi-stop trip.
Trip Journal
A newer feature that lets you document a trip in real time — add photos, log visited stops, and create a shareable adventure map post-trip. Useful for freelancers who want to document client-site visits or content creators building destination guides from the road.
Hotel Price Monitoring
Wanderlog alerts you when a hotel you’ve saved drops below its current price — one user reported saving $55 CAD on a Scotland booking after receiving a price drop notification. A practical background feature that runs passively while you’re building the rest of your plan.
🗣️ Voice of the Street: “It can easily replace lists in Maps, spreadsheets, Chrome bookmarks, calendar events, personal notes, and more. I used to get exhausted planning one or two trips a year; now I can plan 10 trips a year and have time to spare.” – Wanderlog.com user review
⚖️ Pros & Cons
✅ The Good:
- The most feature-rich free tier in the manual trip organizer category — map view, route lines, real-time collaboration, Gmail import, and budget tracking all available without paying
- Route optimization and offline maps on Pro ($4.99/month or $50/year) are genuinely useful rather than artificially gated basics — the free tier is legitimately complete for most travelers
- Hotel price monitoring runs passively and has delivered real savings for users — a standout background feature
- Offline access on Pro is a practical essential for international travelers on foreign SIMs — the Pro tier earns its price on this alone for frequent travelers
- Community itinerary library lets you browse and clone real-traveler plans as starting points, supplementing the lack of AI generation
❌ The Bad (The Catch):
- No AI itinerary generation — Wanderlog is a manual builder; if you want an AI to produce a day-by-day plan from a prompt, this is not that tool
- Offline access requires Pro — for international travelers without a local SIM, being unable to view your itinerary without cell service is a real operational problem that the free tier doesn’t solve
- AI assistant is limited to 5 messages per trip on the free tier, then paywalled behind Pro — barely enough to test the feature
- No live flight prices, no live hotel availability — it organizes your bookings after you’ve made them; it won’t help you find or compare deals
- Can feel slow when pinning many places to the map — performance degrades on complex itineraries according to multiple user reports
💰 Pricing Breakdown (Is it worth it?)
Wanderlog’s free tier is one of the most generous in the trip planning category — map planning, real-time collaboration, Gmail import, budget tracking, and the community itinerary library are all free. The Pro tier runs $4.99/month or $50/year (billed annually only — no monthly billing option) and adds offline maps, route optimization, unlimited AI messages, document upload, Google Maps export, and an ad-free experience.
At $50/year, Pro makes sense for two types of users: road trippers who’ll use route optimization repeatedly across multiple trips, and international travelers for whom offline map access is functionally essential. For everyone else, the free tier covers the core workflow. Note that Pro is billed annually with no monthly option, so you’re committing to a year upfront.
Plan
Price
Key Limits
Best For
Free
$0/mo
5 AI messages per trip, no offline access, ads shown, no route optimizer, no Google Maps export
Casual travelers, group planners, anyone replacing spreadsheets and browser tabs
Pro
$4.99/mo (billed $50/year — annual only)
No usage caps found; unlimited AI messages, offline maps, route optimization, document upload, ad-free
Road trippers, international travelers, frequent flyers who live inside the app
⚔️ The Kill-Matrix: Wanderlog vs Competitors
Wanderlog dominates the manual planning and post-booking organization category. Where it competes with AI-first generators like TripGen, it loses on automation; where it competes with TripIt on reservation management, TripIt edges ahead on flight-specific features. Its real competition is the spreadsheet — and it beats that decisively.
Feature
Wanderlog
TripIt
TripGen
Stardrift
Free Tier
✅ Generous — map, collab, Gmail import
✅ Solid — unlimited reservation import
✅ Fully free, no account
✅ Fully free
AI Itinerary Generation
⚠️ Pro only (5 msg limit on free)
❌ None
✅ Core feature, free
✅ Core feature, free
Map-Based Visual Planning
✅ Best in class — Google Maps embedded
❌ List only
❌ No map view
❌ No map view
Real-Time Group Collaboration
✅ Google Docs-style live editing
⚠️ Share/view only, no co-editing
❌ No
⚠️ Share link, view only
Gmail / Email Import
✅ Auto-import on free
✅ Best-in-class auto-import
❌ No
❌ No
Preference Memory
⚠️ Saves past trips, not travel preferences
⚠️ Saves past trips
❌ Cold start every session
✅ Persists across sessions
Live Flight Prices
❌ No
⚠️ Price drop alerts on Pro
❌ No
✅ Live fare data
Offline Access
⚠️ Pro only
✅ Free
❌ No
❌ No
Best For
Visual trip building, road trips, group planning
Reservation management, flight tracking
Fast AI itinerary drafts, zero friction
Frequent flyers, preference memory
SRG Verdict
Wanderlog earns the highest overall score in this travel planner series for one reason: it solves a real, persistent problem — organizing a complex trip across multiple people, platforms, and booking types — better than anything else at its price point.
The Google Maps integration isn’t a gimmick; seeing your route drawn spatially as you build it is genuinely how routing errors get caught before they become real-world wasted hours. The free collaborative editing is a meaningful differentiator for anyone planning with a partner or team.
Gmail import means you’re not doing data entry every time a confirmation lands in your inbox. For freelancers running their own travel for client sites, conferences, or team offsites, Wanderlog is the closest thing to a competent travel EA that doesn’t require a subscription to deliver most of its value.
The gaps are real and worth naming: if you need an AI to build your itinerary from scratch, use TripGen or Stardrift first. If you need live flight price comparison, Google Flights still owns that. And if you travel internationally frequently, the offline access paywall is a genuine friction point that pushes you toward Pro.
But for the trip organization layer — the part where you take a pile of research, bookings, and group opinions and turn them into a coherent shareable plan — Wanderlog is the SRG pick in 2026.
Wanderlog Reviews
Reviews
Better free tier than TripIt and cheaper Pro — map view is the decisive advantage.
TripIt still does flight-specific features better if that's your priority.
Bill splitting for group trips is simple and actually works.
Manual entry only — no currency conversion, no live price pull.
Map view and collaboration are genuinely excellent.
Coming from AI-first tools, having to do all your own research feels like a step backward.
Route optimizer on Pro is legitimately the best feature — reordered a 9-stop day into a rational sequence instantly.
Should be free, but $50/year is hard to argue with for the full package.
Best free tool for organizing a complex international itinerary.
Offline access behind a paywall is a genuine problem when you're abroad without a local SIM.
Community itinerary library is underrated — cloned a Tokyo itinerary and saved hours of research.
No AI generation means I'm still doing all my own research first.
Real-time co-editing for group trips is the best implementation I've found.
The AI assistant is way too limited on the free tier — 5 messages is not enough to evaluate it.
Hotel price drop alert actually saved me real money on a Scotland booking.
Wish the Pro offline feature was part of the free tier for international travelers.
Gmail import is the feature I didn't know I needed until I had it.
No live flight prices means I still need Google Flights open alongside it.
Replaced my entire spreadsheet workflow — map view alone is worth it.
Runs a bit slow when you've pinned 40+ places on a single trip.
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