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My favourite travel websites and apps for managing trips

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The internet is littered with articles listing the best travel apps and websites …. but in my experience, none of them are particularly useful.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to work out that if you are using Airbnb you should download their app, or the Avios app for managing your Avios. That’s all pretty rudimentary stuff!

But after five plus years working at Head for Points, I’ve come to rely on a handful of tools and resources that make travelling so much easier, all the way from planning and booking to the actual travel and, finally, logging everything I do.

I occasionally mention these in the comments or my annual travel round-up and often get questions, so I thought it would make an interesting piece. Hopefully one or two of the resources listed below are new to you and of genuine use.

The best apps and websites for planning travel

Flight Connections website

Flight Connections

As someone who writes about airlines a lot, I often find myself asking where they fly or what their route network looks like.

Although you’d think airlines would make this information easy to access on their website by publishing a route network, this is often not the case – which is where Flight Connections can help.

Flight Connections is a website that shows you every single route operated by any airline in the world, all on a single map.

The basic concept is very simple but the best thing about Flight Connections is that it lets you filter by airline, airport, airline alliance and more. Want to know where Oman Air (joining oneworld this year) flies? No problem, you can see that for free in one click.

To drill down by alliance, class, aircraft, flight duration and more you have to sign up to premium ($3.33/month). I find I generally only need to filter by airline so I just use the basic free tier but it’s a very useful resource nonetheless, and something I’d definitely consider paying for.

(As per the comments below, flightsfrom.com is an alternative.)

flightconnections.com

Great Circle Mapper

Great Circle Mapper

Whilst a lot of loyalty programs are going revenue-based, there are still programmes that award miles and tier points based on miles flown. But how many miles is it between, say, London and Hong Kong?

Great Circle Mapper is a long standing tool that does the hard work for you, and a lot more besides. It was originally launched in 1996 and looks a bit dated, but it’s very powerful if you know how to use it.

Simply inputting the origin and destination airports will tell you the most direct distance between them. You can also map aircraft ranges against an origin airport and even draw maps for reference.

Note that it is not on https:// so it may trigger a warning in your browser.

www.gcmap.com

The best apps and websites for organising travel

TripIt

TripIt

Last year I flew 81 times. Keeping track of all those trips can be exhausting, especially because details are scattered across email confirmations, booking updates and more.

TripIt makes managing all that much easier. Part of what makes it so useful is that I can simply email my booking confirmations and it will automatically process them, highlighting my itinerary in more visual and user-friendly ways.

I can quickly check my flights, copy and paste a booking reference or see where I still need to book accommodation or flights. When I’m travelling, I don’t need to dig through hundreds of emails to find the information I’m looking for.

As an organisational tool, TripIt’s free tier is very good. If you want live updates (such as when to go to your gate, which baggage carousel your flight is using etc) then you can pay $49/year for TripIt Pro. The free tier is good enough for me, however.

tripit.com

The best apps and websites when travelling

Flighty

Flighty

Flighty is a relatively new app – and only available for iPhones – but one that I find indispensable. Flighty is not an organisational tool but allows you to keep track of your flights in real time.

Flighty connects to airlines’ internal scheduling systems to see where your plane is and when it is due to arrive. I have no idea how it works but it’s incredibly accurate and will often show delays before airline staff know or have announced it.

For example, it will show if your aircraft is arriving late and what impact that will have on your trip. Through some clever machine learning it can predict how long your flight will be delayed and the likely departure time. In my experience, it is very accurate.

The free plan is pretty basic but if you travel a lot I highly recommend upgrading to the Ultimate plan for $47.99 a year, which comes with a lot of the real-time updates and alerts. Well worth it in my opinion.

flighty.com (iOS only)

How Airalo works

Airalo

We covered Airalo in a separate article yesterday but I wanted to cover it again in this list. I travel all over the world, and if I simply relied on my network’s services I’d have long ago spent my own bodyweight in gold on excessive roaming charges.

To save money, we used to buy physical SIM cards locally when arriving at our destination. These days ubiquitous eSIM technology has made the process much smoother and simpler. It can now all be done remotely on your phone with a single app. All you have to do is search for the country, select the amount of data you require, purchase and install it.

Airalo was one of the first companies to offer data eSIMS for foreign countries with over 200 country-specific, regional or global eSIMS ready to download within minutes.

I now spend just 30 seconds in the lounge before my flight downloading one of these so that I can access data services affordably as soon as I land. You can read my full article on Airalo here.

If you want to try Airalo, then you can use my referral code ‘RHYS4258’ when you sign up or at checkout to get $3 off. I’ll also get $3 off my next plan – thank you. The comments to the article yesterday cover other eSIM operators used by readers.

airalo.com

The best apps and websites for logging travel

My FlightRadar24

My FlightRadar24

You’ve probably heard of FlightRadar24 before. It is one of the leading flight-tracking websites and relies on crowdsourced data to make it work.

But did you know it also offers a service called My FlightRadar to log all your flights, past and future? I’ve been using it to track my own flying patterns for years. All you have to do is enter the date and flight number and it will automatically populate everything else for you. You can enter additional information for which cabin you were in, your seat number and more.

The result, once you’ve added your flights, is a beautiful flight map as well as statistics on your own flying including your most popular routes, airports, airlines and cabins. If you’re curious what it looks like, you can see my profile here. The service is free.

my.flightradar24.com

Comments (138)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Susan says:

    Flightsfrom is really handy when planning complex itineraries (or trying to find a cheap Avios OW route to New Zealand) as it shows destinations, including indirect, from every airport and can filter by alliance, airline, dates etc

  • Tim W. says:

    Anyone know an Android app that has the functionality of Flighty (which is ONLY for Apple – the Android app of the same name is nothing to do with the Apple app)?

  • Simon Bradford says:

    I’ve been using kayak alongside TripIt. Very useful plus it’s free. Similar functionality and ease of use as TripIt.

  • LostAntipod says:

    Article should state the Android version of flighty is an ad-infested scam.

  • Ian says:

    I use myflighpath.com as well as my.flightradar.com plus ba97.com

    So some redundancy. With appintheair shutting down, and any of these could close overnight it is good to have a duplicate.

    I started with ba97 which is aimed at Flyertalk ba forum first, but kept it going. I use the notes section to record the tail number and it is easy to see if the aircraft is new to you.

    • NorskSaint says:

      SAS introduced this into their app last year and the geek in me loves it. From that I know that I have flown most regularly on EISIE 32S, a total of 12 times. It also lets me know 11C is my favourite seat with SAS….

  • Mikeact says:

    I would suggest Citymapper as a very good option if travelling to one of their cities listed. Point to point information is excellent…choose walking, cycling, taxis, public transport…buses, metro etc etc. Which part of the tube to use, excellent..

  • The other Kevin says:

    My Google calendar updates automatically after receiving flight confirmation email from BA but not from Qatar. What’s the best way to get that detail into the calendar?

  • BJ says:

    “Last year I flew 81 times. Keeping track of all those trips can be exhausting”

    Is that trips or sectors? If it’s sectors then it’s not much at all, lest than one return trip per week assuming direct flights. That’s simple to manage using you head, email and MMB, it shouldn’t be exhausting at all, certainly not for somebody your age. It sounds to me like you, and a whole bunch of others here are using apps just for the sake of it but each to their own.

    • NorskSaint says:

      Disagree completely. With the prevalence of emails now even with a dedicated travel folder it isn’t easy. Last year I flew 185 sectors, keeping track of those, plus hotel bookings especially when booked with one-way tickets expends more time than is needed.

      If an app can package that into a travel tool which is easily digestible, presents it in a manner which allows me to easily see my next trip, know if there are delays, if I booked a hotel etc. then its not just for the sake of it.

      As you say each to their own.

      • BJ says:

        Even at the peak of my travels around 95-05 when I was flying well over 200 sectors some years I never found it onerous, admitedly though I did totally forget about one trip to Germany. As a student 40 years ago with PC, email, internet still around the corner me, and loads of others, would head into STA offices emerging sometimes with very large bunches of train, plane, ferry tickets etc. It was exciting, not stressful or exhausting. I have no recollection of difficulties managing any of it, or even getting stuff sorted out when something went wrong.

    • Rhys says:

      I use these apps because they make my life easier, BJ…

      • BJ says:

        Obviously i’m not travelling so muvh these days, typically less than 40 lsectors and 60 nights a year so nowhere near comparable to you. The only travel apps I have on my phone are BA, QR, AY, IB, Hilton, IHG, radisson, LNER and Avanti. None of the more specialist composite apps you refer too. It’s always been the same although different apps at different periods and it has been fine for me. The apps are obviously much better now but in the past I found them a bit frustrating as they had more limited functionalityvthan the websites and many still do.

        • NorskSaint says:

          Agree its about making life easier. Tripit as an example takes all matters of reservations, restaurants, excursions, car hire, cruise etc.
          It means its all at my finger tips rather than hunting for an email etc or filling out an excel.
          Tripit also links to flighty so I can track mine and family flights.

      • ADS says:

        the other great thing about TripIt is that it helps you spot any mistakes you make when putting together complicated itineraries … or even just simple itineraries when you book a hotel for the wrong day / month / year!

        i didn’t bother forwarding a car hire booking to TripIt a few years ago – so I didn’t notice that I’d booked it for the wrong island !

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