TripIt Alternatives: Top 5 in 2026

By John from the Nomad TeamMay 4, 2026
TripIt Alternatives: Top 5 in 2026

The best alternatives to TripIt in 2026 are Nomad, App in the Air, Wanderlog, Sygic Travel, and Kayak Trips. Nomad leads for digital nomads who need automated day-counting across Schengen 90/180, 183-day tax residency, and visa-free limits across 195+ countries, with passport details stored privately on-device. App in the Air is the closest like-for-like alternative for frequent flyers who want flight alerts and airport intel. Wanderlog suits travelers who want collaborative itineraries and shared budgets. Sygic Travel works best for sightseeing-heavy trips with offline city guides. Kayak Trips is a free pick if you already book with Kayak. Unlike general travel apps, Nomad is purpose-built for compliance tracking and includes an AI chat assistant for visa questions.

Quick comparison

AppBest forPlatformPrice tier
NomadVisa compliance and day-countingiOSFree trial, then subscription
TripItAuto-built itineraries from confirmation emailsiOS, Android, WebFree tier + paid Pro
App in the AirFrequent flyers and flight alertsiOS, Android, WebFree tier + paid Premium
WanderlogCollaborative itineraries and shared budgetsiOS, Android, WebFree tier + paid premium
Sygic TravelOffline city guides and sightseeingiOS, Android, WebFree + optional paid
Kayak TripsFree itinerary aggregator linked to KayakiOS, Android, WebFree

What TripIt does, and why people look for alternatives

TripIt (the itinerary aggregator from SAP Concur, tripit.com) is one of the longest-running travel organizers on the market. You forward a confirmation to plans@tripit.com and TripIt parses the email into a single trip view. It runs on iOS, Android, and the web, has a free tier, and a paid TripIt Pro subscription adds flight alerts, fare refund monitoring, and point tracking, verified against their pricing page in April 2026.

Itinerary aggregation is the thing TripIt does well. The reasons people search for an alternative are usually about what it does not do:

  • No visa compliance logic. TripIt records your flights, hotels, and rentals. It does not count Schengen days, monitor a 90-day visa-free limit, or warn you before an overstay.
  • No 183-day tax residency tracking. If you split a year across several countries, TripIt does not surface running day totals against each country's residency threshold.
  • Designed around bookings, not stays. A nomad who lands in Lisbon and stays for six weeks without forwarding emails is invisible to TripIt.
  • No AI assistant for visa questions. You cannot ask TripIt "how many days can a US passport stay in Thailand?" and get an answer.
  • Pro features locked behind a paywall. Real-time flight alerts, the part many users actually want, sit behind TripIt Pro.

If your travel pattern is multiple bookings stitched together, TripIt is hard to beat. If your problem is staying on the right side of visa and tax rules across many countries, you need a different shape of tool.

Alternative #1: Nomad - best for automated visa compliance

Nomad (the visa compliance app for digital nomads) is built around the one thing TripIt and most travel apps skip: counting your days against the rules that actually matter. It tracks days across every country automatically, alerts you before overstays, and keeps passport details on your device for privacy. It covers visa-free stay limits across 195+ countries, Schengen 90/180 rolling-window calculations, and 183-day tax residency tracking in parallel.

Why choose Nomad over TripIt

  • Compliance logic, not just bookings. TripIt organizes confirmations. Nomad adds the rules layer on top, so it can warn you 7, 3, and 1 day before a stay limit expires. For the underlying mechanics, see the Schengen 90/180 rule explained.
  • Schengen 90/180 and 183-day tracking built in. Running-window calculations, not manual spreadsheets. The math behind tax residency thresholds is laid out in the 183-day rule explained.
  • Privacy-first storage. Passport numbers and photos stay on your device. Only travel dates and countries sync to the cloud. TripIt requires full cloud storage of your itineraries.
  • AI chat for visa questions. Ask "how long can I stay in Japan on a US passport?" in plain English. TripIt has no equivalent because it is not a visa tool.
  • Built for stays, not just bookings. Nomad cares about when you crossed a border and how long you stayed. It does not need a forwarded confirmation to know you were in a country.

Key features

  • Automatic day tracking across every country with timezone-aware calculations
  • Schengen 90/180 rolling-window calculator
  • 183-day tax residency tracking for multiple countries simultaneously
  • AI compliance chat with travel-domain guardrails
  • Overstay alerts at 7, 3, and 1 day intervals
  • Passport expiry reminders and multi-passport support for dual or triple citizens
  • Travel history timeline with visual calendar
  • Export travel records to PDF or CSV for visa applications

Pricing

Free trial, then annual subscription. See the App Store for current pricing.

Pros

  • Purpose-built for visa and tax compliance, not retrofitted from a generic travel tracker
  • Privacy-first: sensitive data stays on your device rather than the cloud
  • Handles multi-passport scenarios that most general apps ignore

Cons

  • iOS only today. Android is on the roadmap but not available as of April 2026.
  • Subscription required after the trial, so it is not the right fit if you only travel once or twice a year.
  • Not an itinerary aggregator. If you want a single view of every booking, pair it with TripIt or Wanderlog.

Verdict

If your reason for leaving TripIt is compliance (Schengen, 183-day rules, visa-free limits), Nomad is the most direct answer. If you mostly want a clean view of confirmation emails for a packed business-travel calendar, keep reading.

Alternative #2: TripIt - best for itineraries from confirmation emails

TripIt is the reference point for this comparison and worth listing honestly because many readers will decide to stay with it. The product launched in 2006 and was acquired by Concur in 2011, and that maturity shows in the breadth of supported confirmation formats.

Key features

  • Auto-parsed itineraries from forwarded confirmation emails
  • Single trip view across flights, hotels, rentals, trains, cruises, and activities
  • Calendar sync with iOS Calendar, Google Calendar, and Outlook
  • Sharing of trip details with travel companions, family, or assistants
  • TripIt Pro adds flight alerts, gate change notifications, fare refund monitoring, point tracking, seat tracker, and a check-in reminder

Pricing

TripIt has a free tier with the core itinerary aggregation. TripIt Pro is sold as an annual subscription, verified against the public pricing page in April 2026. Exact pricing varies by region, so check the site for your country.

Pros

  • The most complete itinerary parser on the market because it has been doing this longest
  • Cross-platform on iOS, Android, and the web
  • Handles complex multi-leg business trips cleanly
  • Calendar integration is genuinely useful for people who live in their work calendar

Cons

  • No visa compliance, day-counting, or tax residency logic
  • Real-time flight alerts and most premium features sit behind TripIt Pro
  • Designed around bookings, so long open-ended stays without confirmations are invisible
  • No AI assistant for travel questions

Verdict

Stay with TripIt if your travel is mostly bookable trips and you want one place that ingests confirmation emails. Pair it with a dedicated compliance tool if you also need to track days against visa rules.

Alternative #3: App in the Air - best for frequent flyers

App in the Air (appintheair.mobi) is the closest like-for-like alternative to TripIt for travelers whose lives revolve around flights. It tracks flight status, gate changes, and delays, surfaces airport tips, and keeps a personal flight log. It runs on iOS, Android, and the web, with a free tier and a paid Premium subscription.

Key features

  • Real-time flight status, gate changes, and delay alerts
  • Airport intel including security wait times, lounges, and terminal maps
  • Auto-import of flights from email and calendars
  • Personal flight log with statistics (miles flown, longest flight, status by airline)
  • Boarding pass storage and check-in reminders
  • Apple Watch and widgets for at-a-glance flight info

Pricing

App in the Air offers a free tier with most basic tracking. Premium is a subscription that adds offline maps, advanced alerts, and ad removal, priced on a monthly or annual plan as listed on their site as of April 2026.

Pros

  • Strong flight tracking, often praised against TripIt Pro for alert quality
  • Cross-platform with watch and widget support
  • Pleasant flight statistics and travel year-in-review

Cons

  • Flight-centric, so non-flight bookings (hotels, rentals) get less attention than in TripIt
  • No visa compliance, day-counting, or tax residency logic
  • Premium features overlap with TripIt Pro, so paying for both is rarely worth it

Verdict

Choose App in the Air if your pain point is flights specifically (alerts, gate changes, mileage tracking) rather than full multi-segment itineraries. It is the better single-purpose option for road-warrior frequent flyers.

Alternative #4: Wanderlog - best for planning and shared budgets

Wanderlog (wanderlog.com) sits on the planning side of the spectrum rather than the aggregator side. It is built around collaborative itineraries, maps, and budgets, and it can also import bookings from Gmail in a TripIt-style flow. It is a strong pick for group trips, road trips, and slower personal travel where you actually plan the day rather than just stitching confirmations together. It also features in our Polarsteps alternatives writeup as a planning-first option.

Key features

  • Collaborative itineraries with multiple tripmates editing in real time
  • Route optimization and unlimited stops for road trips
  • Import flight and hotel confirmations from Gmail
  • Budget tracking with cost splitting between travelers
  • Offline access to plans, maps, and saved places
  • Export places to Google Maps

Pricing

Wanderlog offers a free tier with most features. A premium subscription adds offline extras and advanced collaboration, priced on a monthly or annual plan as listed on their site as of April 2026.

Pros

  • Strong planning and budgeting features in the free tier
  • Works on iOS, Android, and the web
  • Good for group and road-trip planning where TripIt feels too business-travel oriented

Cons

  • Planning-first, not compliance-first
  • No visa rules, day-counting, or tax residency logic
  • Email parsing exists but is less polished than TripIt's

Verdict

Choose Wanderlog if you want both the aggregator side of TripIt and a real planner for the day-by-day, especially when traveling with other people.

Alternative #5: Sygic Travel - best for sightseeing and offline city guides

Sygic Travel (travel.sygic.com) is a different shape of TripIt alternative. It is less about confirmation emails and more about offline city guides, points of interest, and day-by-day sightseeing plans. It is owned by the Sygic group, the same team behind the offline navigation app, which is why offline performance is a strength.

Key features

  • Offline city guides for thousands of destinations
  • Points of interest with photos, opening hours, and reviews
  • Day-by-day itinerary builder with map-based planning
  • Routing between stops with travel time estimates
  • Trip sharing with companions
  • Premium tier adds offline maps and unlimited trips

Pricing

The core app is free with optional in-app purchases for premium features and offline city packs. Pricing varies by region and is listed in the app store, verified as of April 2026.

Pros

  • Offline performance is genuinely strong, useful for travelers in low-connectivity countries
  • Sightseeing and POI data is broader than what TripIt offers
  • Pleasant map-first interface

Cons

  • Not really an itinerary aggregator; you build trips manually rather than forwarding confirmations
  • No visa compliance, day-counting, or tax residency logic
  • Less useful for business travel patterns

Verdict

Pick Sygic Travel if your trips are sightseeing-heavy and you want offline city intel more than email parsing. It complements rather than replaces a TripIt-style aggregator.

Bonus mention: Kayak Trips - best free aggregator if you book with Kayak

Kayak Trips is bundled with the Kayak booking app on iOS, Android, and the web. It auto-organizes bookings (especially flights you booked through Kayak) into a trip view and supports email forwarding similar to TripIt. It is a reasonable free pick for travelers already living in Kayak's ecosystem, but it is not as polished as TripIt for non-Kayak bookings and has no visa or compliance features.

Feature matrix

FeatureNomadTripItApp in the AirWanderlogSygic Travel
Visa/day trackingYesNoNoNoNo
Tax residency (183-day)YesNoNoNoNo
Itinerary from emailNoYesYes (flights)YesNo
Real-time flight alertsNoPro onlyYesLimitedNo
Offline supportYesLimitedYesYesYes
Price tierFree trial, then subscriptionFree + paid ProFree + paid PremiumFree + paid premiumFree + optional paid
PlatformsiOSiOS, Android, WebiOS, Android, WebiOS, Android, WebiOS, Android, Web

How to choose the right TripIt alternative

Pick based on what you actually need to do:

  1. For visa compliance and day-counting, pick Nomad. Schengen 90/180, 183-day tax residency, and visa-free limits are built in. No other app on this list does that. The case for compliance tracking grows every year as more countries enforce stay limits, a trend covered in our digital nomad statistics 2026 overview.
  2. For a clean view of confirmation emails, pick TripIt. Still the best at the original job if your travel is booking-heavy.
  3. For flight alerts and frequent-flyer tracking, pick App in the Air. It usually beats TripIt Pro on flight-specific features at a similar price.
  4. For collaborative trip planning, pick Wanderlog. Shared editing and budget splitting are its strengths.
  5. For offline city guides and sightseeing, pick Sygic Travel. Especially helpful in countries where mobile data is patchy.
  6. If you live in Kayak's ecosystem and want a free option, Kayak Trips is enough. Most people outgrow it as their travel gets more complex.
  7. If you cross borders frequently, run TripIt for itineraries and Nomad for compliance. They track different data and coexist comfortably.

Frequently asked questions

Is TripIt still worth using in 2026?

Yes, for its core use case. TripIt remains the most mature itinerary aggregator on the market and is hard to beat at parsing forwarded confirmation emails into a single trip view. The free tier covers basic itineraries, and TripIt Pro adds flight alerts for an annual fee. It is worth using if your travel is mostly bookable trips. It is not worth using on its own if you need visa compliance, day-counting, or tax residency tracking, because TripIt does not include any of those.

What is the best free alternative to TripIt?

Kayak Trips is the strongest fully free option if you already book through Kayak. Wanderlog has a generous free tier with collaborative itinerary planning, email parsing, and budget tracking. App in the Air offers free flight tracking with optional Premium upgrades. Nomad has a free trial then requires a subscription, so it is not free in the same sense, but it solves a different problem. None of the free options handle visa compliance.

Does TripIt track visa compliance or day limits?

No. TripIt is an itinerary aggregator. It organizes flights, hotels, rentals, and other bookings from forwarded emails, but it does not calculate Schengen 90/180 rolling windows, count days toward 183-day tax residency thresholds, or alert you before a visa-free stay expires. For compliance tracking, a dedicated tool like Nomad is purpose-built. TripIt can still be useful as an itinerary tracker alongside a separate day-counter.

Can I use TripIt and Nomad together?

Yes, and many travelers do. TripIt handles the bookings side (flights, hotels, rentals, calendar sync) and Nomad handles the compliance side (day counts, Schengen, 183-day rules, overstay alerts). They track different data, so running both does not create conflicts. Forwarding a confirmation to TripIt does not affect Nomad and vice versa.

Which TripIt alternative is best for digital nomads?

Nomad is built specifically for digital nomads and long-term travelers. It tracks days across 195+ countries automatically, handles Schengen 90/180 and 183-day tax residency calculations, supports multi-passport holders, and sends compliance alerts before limits expire. TripIt, App in the Air, Wanderlog, and Sygic Travel are organized around bookings, flights, planning, and sightseeing rather than rules.

Is TripIt available on Android?

Yes. TripIt is on iOS, Android, and the web as of April 2026. App in the Air, Wanderlog, Sygic Travel, and Kayak Trips also support Android. Nomad is currently iOS only, with Android on the roadmap but not yet released.

Is TripIt Pro worth the upgrade?

That depends on your travel volume. TripIt Pro adds real-time flight alerts, gate change notifications, fare refund monitoring, and point tracking for an annual fee. If you fly several times a month, Pro generally pays for itself through fewer missed gate changes and faster rebookings. If you fly only a few times a year, the free tier covers most of what you need. Frequent flyers often compare it directly to App in the Air Premium, which has overlapping flight-alert features.

Do any of these apps work without internet?

Most of them do, with caveats. Sygic Travel and App in the Air both invest heavily in offline use. Wanderlog supports offline access to saved plans and maps. Nomad is offline-first for day tracking and syncs when reconnected. TripIt's offline mode is more limited and works best when you have loaded the trip while online. If you cross borders by land or land in countries where you buy a SIM after arrival, prioritize the apps with stronger offline handling.

Final verdict

Different travelers need different tools. If your travel is built on confirmation emails and you want a single view of flights, hotels, and rentals, TripIt is still the classic. If your pain is flight alerts and frequent-flyer tracking, App in the Air is usually a better fit. If you plan trips with other people or want a real itinerary builder, Wanderlog wins. If your trips are sightseeing-heavy and you spend time in low-connectivity countries, Sygic Travel is the better shape. Kayak Trips is the free fallback if you live in Kayak's booking ecosystem.

If you cross borders across multiple countries each year and the real problem is staying on the right side of visa and tax rules, none of those are built for you. Nomad is. It counts days automatically, understands Schengen 90/180 and 183-day residency math, alerts you before limits expire, and keeps passport details on-device. For digital nomads and multi-passport holders, it pays for itself the first time it stops you from accidentally overstaying.

Simple split for most readers: forward emails and want a clean trip view, TripIt or Wanderlog. Cross borders frequently and need to know your remaining Schengen or 183-day count, Nomad.

Download Nomad on the App Store

Sources

  • TripIt official site and pricing page, tripit.com, verified April 2026
  • App in the Air official site, appintheair.mobi, verified April 2026
  • Wanderlog official site, wanderlog.com, verified April 2026
  • Sygic Travel official site, travel.sygic.com, verified April 2026
  • Kayak Trips, listed within kayak.com, verified April 2026
  • Schengen Borders Code (Regulation (EU) 2016/399), official EU rules on the 90/180 calculation
  • OECD model tax convention commentary on residence and the 183-day test

About Nomad

Nomad is the visa compliance app for digital nomads. Built by nomads for nomads, it tracks your days across every country automatically, alerts you before overstays, and keeps passport details on your device for privacy. The in-app AI assistant answers visa questions in plain English. Available on iOS.

Download Nomad on the App Store

Important: This content is informational and does not constitute legal, tax, or immigration advice. Visa rules, tax regulations, and entry requirements change frequently and vary by individual circumstances. Always verify current requirements with official government sources or a qualified professional before making travel decisions. Nomad tracks your days and surfaces compliance information, but final responsibility for compliance rests with the traveler.

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