Why Daypin exists
Most AI travel apps make you click through forms, then hand back a list that has you criss-crossing the city for every meal. Daypin does the opposite. You chat with it like a friend who travels well, and it builds a day that flows — east in the morning, west in the afternoon, dinner near home.
What makes it different
Real places, not guesses. Every spot Daypin suggests is checked against Google Places in real time — confirmed open, rated above 4.2 stars, with enough reviews to mean something. No closed restaurants, no hallucinated cafés, no places that shuttered two years ago.
Days that actually flow. Stops are clustered geographically so your morning, afternoon, and evening make sense on a map. You won't spend half your trip on the metro backtracking because an app put coffee in the north and lunch in the south.
It knows if you've been before. Tell Daypin it's your tenth time in Tokyo and it shifts away from landmarks toward the places locals actually go — neighbourhood izakayas, a ceramics market, a kissaten that's been there since the seventies. First visit gets you the hits; return visits get you the depth.
You talk, it adjusts. Say "less touristy", "I need a slower afternoon", or "swap that lunch somewhere cheaper" and the plan updates on the spot — no starting over, no re-filling a form. The conversation is the interface.
One price, yours to keep. Pay once per trip ($3.99 single city, $7.99 multi-city tour). No subscription, no credits, no expiry. The plan saves to your device and works offline — useful when you're actually there and signal is unreliable.
Multi-city tours, routed properly. Planning a trip through three or four countries? Daypin builds a single connected tour, routes the stops in a sensible order, and includes realistic travel time between cities — so you're not discovering on day four that the leg from Porto to Seville is six hours by train.
Privacy by default. There's no account required to plan a trip. Your chats and itineraries stay on your device. Nothing is tracked, sold, or used to build a profile. If you choose to share a trip to the Hub, you control what name (if any) appears on it.