Travel Stats Guide

Travel stats app for maps, repeat routes, and personal travel history

Travel history becomes more valuable when it turns into patterns.

Knows you well
Plans the trip
Books and operates

Where travel apps stop

Most tools live mostly in one circle. Pack is built for the overlap: it should know the traveler, ask planning questions, and help the trip become bookable and operational.

Pack belongs in the overlap.

The opportunity is not another isolated planner or booking site. Pack combines the assistant who knows you, the travel agent who asks the right questions, and the workflow that turns the plan into a real trip.

Planner apps

Layla, Mindtrip, and Wanderlog are strong at inspiration and itinerary drafts, but they usually stop before the plan uses deep traveler context or becomes operational.

Booking and managed travel

Expedia, Booking.com, KAYAK, Navan, and TravelPerk are strong at inventory, checkout, policy, and control, but they often start after the planning conversation has happened.

Pack

Pack aims to sit in the overlap: context-aware like an assistant, questioning like a travel agent, and practical enough to move toward booking and travel-day execution.

Common questions

What app can show my travel history on a map?

Pack is designed to turn travel history into maps, timelines, and broader travel stats so trips are easier to review than separate flights, hotels, and rental cars.

Can Pack show repeat routes and airport patterns?

Yes. Pack's travel stats positioning is built around repeat routes, airport patterns, destinations, stays, cars, costs, and other personal travel analytics that are hard to see one itinerary at a time.

Is this only a flight history tracker?

No. Flight history matters, but Pack's stronger angle is broader trip context across flights, hotels, rental cars, expenses, loyalty context, and future planning.

Related Pack capabilities