
The Travel pages in Yume Techo help everyone turn a trip idea into something usable: where to go, what to book, what to pack, what to pay, and what to remember after the trip.
Use this section for weekend trips, family visits, school trips, work trips, theme park days, study abroad, or the someday trip you keep saving in random notes. The pages work best when research, decisions, packing, money, and memories each have their own place.
How to get to these pages

- Open the main Index / Table of Contents. The Travel section is in the right column under Social.
- Tap the Travel page you need. The section includes World Map, Travel Plan, Travel Itinerary, Travel Expenses, Travel Research, Packing List, Travel Notes, and Travel Photos.
- Start with the trip stage. If you are dreaming, start with World Map or Travel Research. If the trip is chosen, start with Travel Plan and Travel Itinerary. If you are close to leaving, start with Packing List.
- Duplicate for every real trip. Make a clean set for Japan trip, family visit, work conference, school trip, holiday travel, weekend stay, or long vacation.
Pages included in Travel
- World Map: for dream destinations, visited places, trip ideas, location-based goals, and travel memories.
- Travel Plan: for the chosen trip overview, destination, dates, budget, priorities, booking notes, and key decisions.
- Travel Research: for options before decisions: transport, hotels, food, attractions, tickets, links, rules, and comparisons.
- Travel Itinerary: for the real day-by-day schedule with activities, times, locations, reservations, and notes.
- Travel Expenses: for budget, paid items, deposits, shared costs, receipts, refunds, and money notes.
- Packing List: for clothes, documents, medicine, chargers, toiletries, kid items, work items, and last-minute checks.
- Travel Notes: for extra trip details, reminders, place reminders, language notes, prayer notes, journal notes, or anything that needs room.
- Travel Photos: for favorite photos, screenshots, moments, and memory notes after the trip.
Ways to use the Travel pages
1. Mark dream places and memories on World Map

Use World Map when the trip is still an idea or when you want a visual record of places that matter. It can hold dream destinations, visited countries, places linked to family history, book locations, study goals, faith trips, or future family adventures.
- Dream map: mark places you want to visit and write why each one matters.
- Visited map: mark past trips and add the year or one memory beside the location.
- Theme map: food places, museums, temples, book locations, stationery shops, nature spots, or family roots.
- Decision map: compare distance, season, budget, and travel difficulty before choosing the next trip.
When one place becomes real, move that place into Travel Research or Travel Plan.
2. Compare options in Travel Research

Use Travel Research for options. This page is the place to compare before choosing: hotels, flights, trains, food, tickets, opening hours, routes, weather, rules, luggage limits, and things to book early.
- Accommodation research: price, location, cancellation rule, check-in time, family needs, accessibility, and transport.
- Transport research: flight, train, bus, rental car, ferry, parking, airport route, and backup option.
- Food research: restaurants, convenience stores, dietary needs, kid-friendly stops, allergy notes, and opening hours.
- Ticket research: museum times, theme park tickets, timed entry, reservation deadline, free days, and closing days.
Circle or highlight the chosen options before building the itinerary. Research is for options; itinerary is for decisions. For comparison examples, open Travel Research page ideas.
3. Make Travel Plan your trip dashboard

Use Travel Plan when the trip has a shape. This page can hold the destination, dates, people, budget, main reason, booking checklist, place reminders, trip priorities, and must-not-forget notes.
- Trip overview: destination, date range, people, purpose, budget, transport, accommodation, and key booking notes.
- Priority list: one must-see place, one food wish, one rest block, one backup activity, and one flexible day.
- Booking checklist: transport, hotel, tickets, insurance, rental, restaurant, pet care, passport, or school/work forms.
- Important notes: check-in rules, luggage rules, medicine reminders, weather, local transport, emergency plan location, or language reminders.
Travel Plan should answer the big questions quickly. Keep details that need comparison on Travel Research and exact timing on Travel Itinerary. For trip dashboard examples, open Travel Planner page ideas.
4. Turn decisions into a real itinerary

Use Travel Itinerary after the main decisions are chosen. This page is for each day: where to go, what time, how to get there, what is booked, what is flexible, and what can be skipped if energy changes.
- Day plan: morning, lunch, afternoon, dinner, evening, transport, and rest blocks.
- Reservation plan: ticket time, restaurant time, tour time, check-in, check-out, train time, and location reminder.
- Family plan: stroller needs, nap break, snack stop, bathroom stop, kid activity, and easy exit option.
- Flexible plan: must-do, maybe, rain option, low-energy option, and free time.
A good itinerary leaves room to be a person. Add food, walking time, delays, and open space on purpose. For day-by-day examples, open Travel Itinerary page ideas.
5. Track trip money in Travel Expenses

Use Travel Expenses for the money side of the trip. It can hold estimated cost, actual cost, paid status, receipt location, shared payments, deposits, refunds, and what still needs to be paid.
- Before travel: flight, hotel, tickets, insurance, transport pass, luggage, supplies, passport, and pet care.
- During travel: food, local transport, souvenirs, tips, medicine, laundry, activities, and emergency purchases.
- Shared costs: who paid, who owes, split amount, transfer date, and receipt location.
- After travel: refunds, deposits returned, reimbursement, total cost, and what to budget differently next time.
Use this page to reduce surprise. It does not need perfect accounting; it needs enough information to make the next money decision easier.
6. Start Packing List before the night-before panic

Use Packing List as soon as the trip is real, not only the night before. The page can hold categories, checked items, last-minute items, and things to buy before leaving.
- Essentials: passport, ID, wallet, phone, charger, medicine, glasses, keys, tickets, booking reminder, and emergency plan reminder.
- Daily items: outfits, pajamas, underwear, shoes, toiletries, makeup, skincare, sunscreen, umbrella, and laundry bag.
- Device items: tablet, stylus, cables, power bank, adapter, headphones, e-reader, camera, SD card, and cloud backup.
- Family items: snacks, water, toy, favorite item, medicine, documents, school forms, stroller item, and spare clothes.
Add a last-minute section for items you cannot pack early: phone, wallet, glasses, medicine, charger, keys, and documents. For grouped packing examples, open Packing List page ideas.
7. Keep extra details in Travel Notes

Use Travel Notes for anything that does not fit neatly into research, itinerary, packing, or expenses. It can be a flexible trip notebook inside the planner.
- Useful notes: place reminders, local words, airport instructions, hotel rules, transit notes, weather notes, and emergency plan reminder.
- Memory notes: favorite moments, funny lines, food notes, people met, child quotes, or what made the trip special.
- Reflection notes: what worked, what was too much, what to pack next time, and what to skip.
- Faith or personal notes: prayers, verses, gratitude, lessons, places that mattered, or quiet trip reflections.
If a note turns into an action, move the action to Weekly or Daily. Travel Notes can hold the details, but the dated planner should hold the next step.
8. Save favorite moments in Travel Photos

Use Travel Photos after the trip, during quiet travel moments, or while sorting favorite screenshots. This page is for saving the small visual pieces that tell the story.
- Favorite photos: one food, one place, one room, one view, one person, one funny moment, and one tiny detail.
- Screenshot memories: map route, ticket reminder, hotel view, weather, playlist, sign, or favorite review.
- Photo notes: date, place, who was there, why it mattered, and what you want to remember.
- After-trip review: what to repeat, what to skip, what to budget differently, and what to print or share.
This page does not need every photo. Choose the ones that help the trip feel remembered.
9. Bring the Travel pages together from planning to memories

The Travel section works best when each page has a different job. World Map holds places, Travel Research holds options, Travel Plan holds the chosen trip, Travel Itinerary holds the days, Travel Expenses holds money notes, Packing List catches items, Travel Notes holds extra details, and Travel Photos keeps memories.
- Dream or choose. Use World Map and Travel Research first.
- Decide the trip shape. Move the chosen destination, dates, and priorities to Travel Plan.
- Build the real days. Use Travel Itinerary only after the main options are chosen.
- Prepare to leave. Use Travel Expenses and Packing List before the week gets busy.
- Remember after. Use Travel Notes and Travel Photos to keep what mattered.
What I usually use it for and how I use it
Tips for using these pages
- Give research a decision deadline. Travel Research can keep growing forever. When the options are enough, circle the hotel, route, restaurant, or activity you are choosing, then move the decision to Travel Plan or Travel Itinerary.
- Leave room in the itinerary. A trip plan needs transition time, food, rest, weather changes, and human energy. Mark must-do, maybe, and skip so the day can bend without breaking.
- Start Packing List early. Packing is easier as categories than as a midnight memory test. Add a last-minute section for phone, wallet, glasses, medicine, charger, keys, and documents.
- Track trip money in one place. Use Travel Expenses for amount, paid status, receipt location, who paid, refunds, deposits, and what still needs follow-up.
- Choose a few memory photos. Travel Photos works best with the pictures that tell the story: one food, one place, one funny moment, one detail, and one note about why it mattered.
- Keep sensitive trip details somewhere safer. Passport numbers, payment details, booking QR codes, full medical documents, and private family/contact information belong in a secure app or protected folder. In Travel pages, keep a short reminder and where to find the private detail.
When you need setup help
If the app step is the hard part, open the NozomuNoto Help Center for importing Yume Techo, duplicating trip pages, adding photos, using links, and finding page thumbnails in your app.
Tips for using this page
- Choose the one part of this page that helps the current week instead of trying to fill everything at once.
- Move one small next action to Weekly or Daily so the page changes what happens next.
- Keep the page easy to return to by linking it from Index, favorites, bookmarks, or the related planner section.
Final thought
Travel pages are useful when they separate options from decisions and planning from remembering. Research freely, choose the real plan, leave enough room for life, and save the pieces you want to remember. I hope these pages make each trip easier to plan, easier to enjoy, and easier to remember after you come home!