Stop rebuilding the trip-planning spreadsheet
Paste the pile of recs you collected. Skip the rows, tabs, and color-coding.

The problem
Type-A travelers spend around 40 hours planning a single trip, and 71% of US adults who arrange travel say planning and booking is stressful. Most of that is manual: copying recommendations into a spreadsheet, then re-typing each place, its category, neighborhood, hours, and a booking note — by hand, one row at a time.
How Tripnostic handles it
- Paste it all at once — bullet lists, paragraphs, or pre-formatted itineraries. Tripnostic extracts the places and categorizes them automatically.
- Every place is looked up and checked: opening hours against your dates, permanent or temporary closures, and whether it needs booking ahead.
- It groups by neighborhood so the plan is usable on the ground, not just a list — no spreadsheet tab required.
Tripnostic product preview
tripnostic.com/trips

Questions
- Why not just use a travel spreadsheet?
- A spreadsheet stores what you typed; it does not check anything. It will not tell you a museum is closed on your travel day or that a restaurant needs a reservation. Tripnostic keeps the structure of a spreadsheet but verifies each place against your actual dates.
- What can I paste in?
- Anything: a friend's text, a ChatGPT or Gemini itinerary, a travel-blog list, screenshots-worth of notes. Bullet points and prose both work.
Related resources
- Janice Moskoff’s free trip itinerary template (Word, Excel, Google Sheets, Canva) — A polished, ready-to-use travel-itinerary template by travel writer Janice Moskoff at Gather and Go Travel — the right starting point if you want the spreadsheet structure first and validation second.
- Sarah Floriani’s Excel travel itinerary template — A practical Excel travel-itinerary template and planning method by Sarah Floriani at That Travel Itch — useful for travelers who want the spreadsheet first and Tripnostic’s date checks after.
- Jessica’s free travel itinerary template (Excel + filled-in sample) — A free Excel travel-itinerary template — flights, hotels, transfers, and a day-by-day schedule, plus a completed sample — by travel writer Jessica at Bon Traveler. A clean spreadsheet starting point if you want the structure first and Tripnostic’s date checks second.