Most travelers already have a personal travel system. It may not look like one. It might be a notes app full of hotel ideas, a spreadsheet of flight prices, screenshots in a camera roll, email confirmations, and a few half-remembered preferences like “avoid tight connections” or “book somewhere with a desk.”
Then, when you ask an AI tool to help plan a trip, you type the same background again: who is traveling, what you can spend, what pace you prefer, what went wrong last time, which airport is easiest, what kind of neighborhood you like, and what has already been decided.
The useful idea is not to chase a “smarter” travel bot. It is to make your own travel context easier to reuse. For many people, that starts with one well-structured travel memory file. For frequent travelers, digital nomads, travel creators, or anyone planning a complicated multi-stop trip, that file may eventually become organized enough that a small local database makes sense.
You do not need to start there. In fact, you probably should not. Start with a file you can read, edit, and trust.