Your memory is lying to you.
Not on purpose. It just gets blurry. That great bowl of ramen you found in a Tokyo back alley? You remember it was amazing. But you don't remember the name of the shop, the steam on the windows, or the way the noodles felt. The details compress. They fade.
A travel history app isn't for putting pins on a map to show off. It's an insurance policy against your own brain. It's for holding onto the feeling of a place, not just its GPS coordinates.
What actually matters in a travel tracker?
Forget the feature lists. Most of them are noise. It comes down to a few things that separate a useful tool from junk on your phone.
Automatic vs. Manual. This is the main difference. Some apps, like Polarsteps, track you automatically with GPS. It's easy, and you get a cool map of your trip. The catch? It can drain your battery, and it only shows where you went, not what happened. Manual logging—adding your own photos and notes—is more work. But it's the only way to tell the story. The best apps mix the two, tracking your general path but making it simple to add your own details.
Offline Access is Essential. You won't always have internet. You'll be on a train, in the mountains, or just saving data. If you can't add a note or a photo because you're offline, the app is broken for a traveler. The good ones work completely offline and sync when you're back on Wi-Fi.