AI can be genuinely useful for travel planning, but choosing the “best” model is less straightforward than it looks. One tool may be excellent at turning a detailed brief into a tidy itinerary. Another may be better at helping you discover what kind of trip you actually want. A third may be useful mainly because it can search current information or work inside files you already use.
A honeymoon, a remote-work month, a multi-country train trip, and a quick food weekend all require different kinds of thinking. But the bigger variable is often you: how you make decisions, how much detail you provide, how you react to suggestions, and where your planning usually gets stuck.
Instead of asking, “Which AI model is smartest?” ask, “Which AI assistant fits the way I plan?” That shift can save time, reduce bland recommendations, and help you avoid handing an important trip to a tool that is impressive in the wrong way.