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I turn a destination, a mood, and a budget into a complete day-by-day trip plan. In minutes. No tabs, no spreadsheets, no decision fatigue. Just a trip you're actually excited about.
The part I'm most proud of: I build real, usable trip plans. Not vague suggestions. Tell me where you want to go, how many days you have, and the kind of trip you're after (Foodie? Adventure? Beach? Culture? All of the above?), and I'll generate a complete day-by-day itinerary with specific places, timing, local tips, and logical routing.
Every itinerary is grounded in real places. I use up-to-date knowledge of restaurants, temples, beaches, museums, and experiences, and I build days that actually flow. Morning activities near each other. Lunch somewhere worth sitting down for. Afternoons that leave room to get lost. Evenings with atmosphere.
“I was built on the belief that a great itinerary isn't just efficient. It has a rhythm. A story. Each day should feel like its own adventure that fits into something bigger.”
No two trips are alike, because no two travellers are alike. I don't build generic “best of Tokyo” lists. I build your Tokyo, shaped by whether you're a night owl or an early riser, whether you'd rather spend money on a Michelin star or split it between five street stalls, and whether you want a packed schedule or room to wander.
The more you tell me, the better the plan. Set your travel vibe (Beach, Foodie, Adventure, Culture, Wellness) and I'll weight every decision around what matters to you. Travel with kids? I know. Budget backpacker? I know. Celebrating something? Tell me and I'll make it special.
You tell me the basics
Destination, travel dates or number of days, adults and children, and your starting budget range. I use this to calibrate everything from where you stay to how you get between places.
You pick your vibes
Choose from travel styles (Foodie, Beach, Culture, Adventure, Wellness, Romantic) or mix them. This shapes the entire character of your trip: the types of activities I prioritise, the neighbourhoods I put you in, and the pace I set.
I generate your plan
Seconds, not hours. Your full itinerary streams in day by day, with specific places, opening times, local tips, estimated costs, and smart scheduling built around your preferences.
You make it yours
Swap anything you don't love. Add activities. Move things around. Use Magic Edit to rewrite a whole day with a single prompt. The plan is a starting point (a really good one) but it's yours to shape.
“I don't believe in one-size-fits-all travel. A honeymoon to Bali looks nothing like a group surf trip to Bali. Same island, completely different plans. I treat them that way.”
The number one thing that wrecks a trip: picking the wrong time of year and not knowing until you arrive. Monsoon season in Bali. Typhoon season in Japan. The scorching high summer in Rome when every tourist and their family has the same idea. I build weather awareness into every itinerary before you even start planning.
When you tell me your travel dates, I pull real weather data for that destination and time period. For trips within the next two weeks, I use live forecast data. For trips further out, I use historical averages from the same period across the past three years, sourced from open meteorological records. This tells me what the weather is actually like at your destination during your window, not just a generic seasonal description.
“I've seen too many itineraries ruined because nobody checked the weather. Hiking Komodo in peak wet season. Rooftop dinners in Rome during a heatwave. I flag these things early so you can plan around them, not discover them on arrival.”
A great itinerary isn't just a list of places. It's the stuff in between: how you get from the airport to your hotel, which train to take between cities, whether it's worth hiring a car or if public transit covers everything, and where the transfers are that will chew up half a day if you don't plan for them. I pull this context from across the web so you don't have to.
For every destination, I factor in local transport networks, typical journey times, and how different areas of a city or country connect to each other. Days are sequenced geographically so you're not zigzagging across a city when a smarter order would let you walk everywhere. Multi-city trips get proper relocation days with transport built in, not just a gap where a journey is assumed.
Sources I draw from
Logistics data is aggregated from public transport authority timetables, airline route databases, government travel advisories, visa information portals, and travel community knowledge bases including travel forums and destination guides. Where I surface booking links for flights, hotels, or experiences, I connect through to the relevant platform (Skyscanner, Booking.com, Agoda, Klook, GetYourGuide, Viator) so you can confirm current availability and prices directly.
“The logistics are usually what people leave to the last minute and then stress about. I build them into the plan from the start because getting from A to B is part of the experience, not an afterthought.”
Group travel is notoriously hard to plan. Someone wants the food tour, someone else wants the beach day, and nobody can agree on the hotel. I'm building something that changes that: collaborative trip planning where everyone can see the itinerary, suggest changes, and land on a plan that actually works for the whole group.
Share your itinerary with your travel crew. They can view the plan, leave notes, and contribute ideas, without stepping on each other's edits. Think of it as a shared document, except it's a living, breathing trip plan that everyone has a hand in shaping.
“Group travel should be fun to plan, not a logistics negotiation. My job is to get everyone on the same page (literally) so you can spend your energy looking forward to the trip, not organising it.”
I'm powered by large language models, the same kind of AI that understands context, nuance, and the difference between a honeymoon and a stag do. When you describe your trip, I don't pattern-match to a template. I reason about your specific situation and generate a plan that fits.
Every itinerary is freshly generated for you. I don't pull from a fixed database of pre-written plans. I think about your destination, your dates, your interests, and your constraints, then build something made for your trip and nobody else's.
I'm also honest about what I know and don't know. Opening hours change. Restaurants close. New places open. I surface real-world context and local tips, but I always recommend you double-check the details before you travel. Think of me as the most knowledgeable friend you have, one who has been everywhere, not a live booking database.
たびたび (tabi tabi) is a Japanese phrase that means “again and again.” It captures something I believe deeply: that great travel has a way of pulling you back. You go once. You come home changed. And then you start planning the next one.
tabi tabi was built by Kube Tech Pte. Ltd., a team of travellers and engineers based in Singapore, a city that sits at the crossroads of Asia's most extraordinary destinations. We built tabi because we kept experiencing the same frustration: trip planning took hours, the tools were fragmented, and the result was often a generic plan that felt nothing like us.
We wanted a travel planner that felt like asking a knowledgeable friend, someone who'd been there, knew the best spots, and could put together something thoughtful in minutes. So we built one.

Tell me where you want to go. I'll have a full itinerary ready before you finish your coffee.
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