Your travel journal

Remember every mile.

TripLog records where you went as a GPS trail, what happened as typed or dictated journal entries, and what it looked like in photos and video — then replays the whole trip on a timestamped map, a day-by-day timeline, and a gallery.

Nothing to install · Web, iPhone & Android · Capture works offline

dictated · 09:42 · big sur 36.27 N, -121.81 W 612 km · 4 days
  • Background GPS trail
  • One-tap dictation
  • Photos auto-geotagged
  • Works offline
  • GPX & GeoJSON export

What it does

The trip records itself. You add the color.

Background tracking draws the trail, photos pin themselves to the map from EXIF data, and a dictate button captures the moment while it's still vivid.

Your route, drawn for you

The mobile app records a GPS trail in the background — position, altitude, speed, heading — and the map replays it as a polyline you can scrub through, with distance and duration computed for every trip.

More on map trails →

Journal at the speed of speech

Tap dictate, talk, done. On-device speech-to-text turns two sentences at a viewpoint into a timestamped, geotagged journal entry — with a mood, so the 6 a.m. ferry and the perfect sunset both read true years later.

More on the journal →

Photos that know where they were

Upload photos, video, or audio and TripLog reads the EXIF data to place each one at the right spot and moment — no evenings spent organizing. A gallery, lightbox, and seekable video player come standard.

More on media →

No signal? No gaps.

Track points, notes, and photos queue on the device and sync automatically when connectivity returns. Dead zones, airplane mode, a week in the backcountry — the record stays complete.

More on offline →

One trip, every phone

Run trips as a team, crew, or family. Everyone captures from their own device into one shared map and timeline, with owner, admin, member, and viewer roles — and an invite code to bring people in.

More on team trips →

Private and portable.

Your trips, trails, journals, and media are stored securely on the TripLog service, and each organization's data is isolated from every other org. No ads, no selling your data — and everything exports to open GPX, GeoJSON, and JSON whenever you want it.

Read the privacy stance →

How it works

From first mile to final export

  1. Start a trip

    Create a trip on web or phone, flip on tracking, and pocket the phone. The trail draws itself.

  2. Capture as you go

    Dictate notes hands-free, snap photos, pin places. Everything lands on the right spot and moment — even offline.

  3. Relive together

    Replay the trip as a map, a day-by-day timeline, stats, and a gallery — merged across everyone on the trip.

  4. Keep it forever

    It all lives safely in your TripLog account, and exports to GPX, GeoJSON, or JSON with one click.

The full walkthrough →

Who it's for

Built for the way you travel

Solo road-tripper

Phone on the dash, eyes on the road

Background tracking draws the coast highway; at viewpoints you dictate two sentences; photos geotag themselves. Back home, export the trail as GPX for the blog post.

Field teams

A whole crew, one record

Survey crews fan out for weeks under one org: trails, rated sites, notes, photos. Members edit only their own records; stakeholders get read-only viewer accounts. Each organization's data stays isolated from every other.

Families

Four phones, one story

Dad dictates from the driver's seat, the kids upload photos, and it all merges into one shared map, timeline, and gallery — moods and all — to reread years later.

Privacy

Your miles are yours.

A trip journal is a location history — among the most personal data there is. Your trips, trails, journals, and media are stored securely on the TripLog service, with each organization's data isolated from every other. No ads, no third-party analytics, and your data is never sold — and open exports mean you can take everything with you or delete it whenever you want.

How we treat your data

Get started

Your next trip deserves a full memory.

Sign in, start a trip, and let the miles record themselves.