Most travel planning problems are not solved by one magical app. They are solved by a dozen small decisions: which neighborhoods fit your budget, which train routes are realistic, which café has reliable working hours, which places are worth saving, which warnings are noise, and which repeated complaints deserve attention.
That is exactly where everyday AI can help—if you ask it to build or organize one small piece of the work instead of the entire trip-planning universe.
A common mistake is opening an AI coding assistant or chatbot and asking for something enormous: “Build me a travel planner,” “Make an itinerary app,” or “Create a tool that finds the best places to stay.” The AI has to invent too many details. It may choose the wrong inputs, create outputs you do not trust, or build something that looks impressive but is hard to inspect.
A better approach is to start with one tiny, useful version: a tool you can run, open, review, and improve. You do not need to be a developer to think this way. You only need to define what “useful” means before asking AI to make anything.