Made for passengers, not only pilots
Traveler mode is the right fit if you love aviation and travel but are not using the app as a pilot logbook. It is designed for passengers and enthusiasts who want a cleaner way to remember where they have been.
Instead of pilot fields like landings and instrument time, you log trip-focused details such as airlines, flight numbers, seat information, and travel notes.
What traveler mode tracks
Trip entries can include departure and arrival airport, airline, flight number, seat class, seat location, date, trip name, booking reference, notes, and visibility. Together, those records shape your travel dashboard and profile.
The more consistently you log, the more useful your airline, airport, and country stats become.
- Airlines used
- Airports visited
- Countries tracked
- Trip history and notes
- Seat preferences and travel identity
Maps, badges, and travel stats
Traveler mode still includes route maps, badges, leaderboard experiences, and profile summaries. The difference is that those surfaces are powered by travel activity rather than pilot flying records.
That makes the app feel more like a personal aviation travel journal with social and statistics layers built in.
Social sharing and privacy
If you want to share travel milestones, set a trip to public and let it appear more naturally across the social side of the app. If you mainly want a private archive, keep your entries private and enjoy the maps and stats for yourself.
As with all visibility decisions, it is best to choose deliberately rather than rely on assumptions.
Who gets the most value from Traveler mode
Traveler mode works especially well for frequent flyers, aviation enthusiasts, airport collectors, and anyone who enjoys looking back on routes, airlines, and destination patterns over time.