The Travellerspoint Travel Map is a free tool (with optional ad-free paid version) to build a beautiful map of your travels to share with friends and family. The TP community have mapped over 1 million trips using this tool!
📅 Plan upcoming trips and map previous travels
✍🏽 Tell a rich story of your travels with linked photos, notes and blog entries
</> Embed your trip map on your own blog
🗺️ Save your map as a high resolution image
🧭 Draw custom routes between your trip stops
🚀 Unlimited trips on one map
📈 Discover just how much travelling you've done on your travel stats page
🔖 Bookmark websites to your trip plan
Comments
Thanks for checking out Travellerspoint's travel mapping tool!
I'm Peter, the founder and developer of Travellerspoint.
This mapping tool has a long history dating back to 2002 when it started out as nothing more than a simple log of countries that people had visited and when they did so. The original intent was for people to be able to track down long lost travel acquaintances. Like a FriendsReunited but for travel.
That particular concept has long since been abandoned, but people did like logging their trips and now here we are, 20+ years later and the trip log has morphed into this full fledged interactive mapping tool.
Travellerspoint has grown to be an online community of over 1 million travellers, with tools to help you discover new destinations, organise your trips and share your travel experiences. The mapping tool is undoubtedly the most popular feature and I am continually updating it for the users.
As a traveller you can use this to
🤔 Clarify your travel plans with an itinerary map
🕸️ Map out all your old trips and marvel at your past travels
🏞️ Add photos and blog entries to your trips
As a blogger or tour operator you can:
💻 Embed itinerary maps on your website.
📍 Create custom itinerary maps for clients and let them explore the proposed route.
📝 Add notes to each stop to provide extra detail on what people will find there.
Aside from the mapping tool, Travellerspoint also has a really friendly and authentic travel community. We have a tightly moderated forum with some very active travellers available to answer questions.
Keen to answer any questions or take any feedback. Let me know what you think! 🙂
I've been wanting something like this on my website, to show the location of what I'm writing about at the top of an article. But do I have to make a separate map for each trip? Is it stored on your site? Do I paste an address into my article? Is there a fee to become a member? So many questions...so little time!
Hi Jo, I guess it depends somewhat what your envisaging on having on your blog.
I'd be interested in knowing what you picture in your mind's eye to fill your need.
As for what Travellerspoint can do right now - it can show you a map of your trip with your current location highlighted on that map. You would need to map out that trip on Travellerspoint where the data will be stored. You can embed the map on your site. To embed maps on external sites, you would need to be a Supporting Member which comes at a price of $3/month. Providing your site allows embedding iframes, then you would need to copy / paste the code to embed into your site and that would do the trick.
Happy to answer any more questions or discuss in more detail privately too.
Hi Peter. This looks great. How can I login and give it a try?
If you click the "Start Mapping your Trip" link on the landing page, it will take you to a signup form.
The link to the landing page can be found under the Links dropdown next to the Upvote button on this page.
Interested in any feedback if you give it a try!
This is awesome. Love this!
looks like a powerful tool. will b checking it out
Thanks Ric. Feel free to get in touch with any issues or feedback. Always looking to improve it!
We like what you guys are doing, in particular the sleek design! Similar idea, but different focus compared to what we've built at LogMy.World which is all about flying.
Would be interesting to see an app-in-the-air/flighty/mileways/tripit data import option
Thanks for the feedback. An import function is something that gets requested from time to time, so quite possibly it's worth doing.