The group chat explodes. Ideas vanish. One person ends up doing everything.
And then comes the awkward “who owes who” message three weeks later.
No credit card • Takes 30 seconds • Built in Switzerland 🇨🇭
Where was that restaurant someone sent? Was it even this year? The excitement drowns in 400+ messages.
You research, you propose, you remind… and still hear “just tell me when and where”. Burnout arrives before departure.
Someone paid for everything. Now it’s months later and nobody wants to be “that person” who brings it up.
“What do we do on day 3?” gets asked 17 times. No one commits. The trip feels like it’s already exhausting.
“We should definitely do that boat tour!” — said once. Never mentioned again. Three months later: regret.
Planning stress + money awkwardness + unbalanced effort = tension nobody talks about. Until the next trip nobody suggests.
Before your group chat turns into chaos — there’s structure.
Before ideas disappear forever — they’re seen.
Before money becomes weird — it’s already fair.
Before stress replaces excitement — there’s calm.
Planning group travel with friends shouldn’t feel like project management.
Create your trip spaceThe trip is over, the memories are fading, but someone (usually the same someone) is now glued to a screen for hours — piecing together crumpled receipts, half-remembered tolls, gas fills, group dinners...
Now it feels like:
Nothing sneaks through the cracks. Every coffee, every tank, every shared Uber lands right when it happens — clear, visible, fair from the start.
That amazing activity gets suggested, ignored, brought up again two weeks later, then forgotten. The group stays vague.
Now it feels like:
Things actually get chosen — together, quickly, fairly.
You've finally got the plan locked in, but mid-trip everyone keeps asking the same thing...
Now it feels like:
Open the app and instantly see what's coming up right now for the current trip.
Everyone takes pictures on their own phone. After the trip, someone drops a shared folder link — and almost nobody uploads anything. It means cables, laptops, sorting files, and remembering later.
Now it feels like:
You take photos directly in the app and they appear instantly in the shared trip album. No extra step. No forgotten uploads. The moment is shared while it’s still happening.
These aren’t just logistics problems.
They’re friendship taxes we don’t have to keep paying.
Real people, real trips, real relief from the usual chaos. Here's what organizers and participants are saying.
Frequent group traveler, Zurich
“No more Excel nightmares at 2 AM after the trip! We logged every coffee, toll, and dinner as we went—everyone paid their share instantly. The app actually made us closer instead of causing arguments.”
Used for: 10-day road trip with 6 colleagues
Team lead, Baar
“The 'what's next?' question killed our vibe every time. Now everyone opens the app and sees the current trip schedule instantly—no digging through chats. Planning felt shared, not solo.”
Used for: Company offsite in the Alps
Weekend warrior, Zug
“I used to dread being the organizer—chasing replies, forgotten receipts, uneven payments. This app turned chaos into calm. Everyone contributed ideas and expenses in one place. Best group trips yet!”
Used for: Multiple friend getaways
Join the community of groups who’ve said goodbye to trip stress.
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Whether it's your first group trip planning adventure or your tenth attempt at
trip planning with friends,
stop losing control before you even leave home.
The best trip planning app isn’t the one with the most buttons.
It’s the one that gives you back peace of mind.