How to plan a travel itinerary without cramming too much in
Planning a travel itinerary sounds easy enough. You open a notes app, start a list called something sensible like Trip ideas, and within half an hour you have added seventeen sights, four cafés, two markets, one rooftop bar, a day trip, and at least one thing described online as a “hidden gem” that 400,000 other people have also apparently discovered. Then you look at your plan and think, yes, this seems reasonable for three and a half days.
I say this with affection, because I have done exactly this. For a long time, I thought a good itinerary was a full itinerary. If a destination had ten interesting things to do, surely the correct approach was to attempt all ten with the energy of a mildly overconfident Labrador.
But over the years I have learned that a good itinerary is not the one that fits in the most. It is the one that still feels enjoyable when you are actually living it. Which is why these days, I plan my days with a bit more care.
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Why so many travel itineraries look good on paper and feel awful in real life
Most itineraries are planned by a version of us who is at home, fully rested, sitting down, hydrated, and wildly optimistic. That version of us is dangerous.
That version thinks distances are short, queues are brief, public transport is obedient, and waking up at the crack of dawn every single day won’t be a problem. That version has never met holiday legs, museum fatigue, or the very specific kind of exhaustion that comes from being too hot in a place that’s supposed to be fun.
On paper, it all looks so tidy. Museum in the morning. Lunch nearby. Wander through old town. Quick viewpoint. Sunset somewhere photogenic. Dinner reservation. Maybe a night market, because why not. In real life, you get lost, walk more than expected, sit down for “five minutes” and somehow emerge forty minutes later, or find a side street so lovely you want to stay there instead of power-marching to the next item on the list.
That is not failure. That is travel being travel. The problem begins when the itinerary has no room for any of that.
Start by deciding what kind of trip you actually want
Before you plan each day, it helps to ask a more important question: What kind of trip do I want this to be?
Do you want a city break packed with highlights? A slower holiday with room for long lunches and wandering? A road trip with scenic stops? A more active trip with hiking or cycling? A content trip where you want time for photos, video, or writing?
This matters because a trip can go wrong even when the destination is right. Sometimes the problem is not where you are going. It is how you have planned to move through it. If what you really want is a slower, more relaxed trip, but your itinerary looks like you are auditioning for a travel-themed obstacle course, something has gone wrong. So before you start assigning activities to days, decide on the rhythm first.

Give each day one main focus
This is the simplest itinerary trick I know, and it saves me from myself on a regular basis. For each full day, choose one main anchor. That might be one major sight, a museum, a day trip, one neighbourhood you want to explore properly, a longer scenic drive, a hike, a cooking class, a cycling tour.
Once that anchor is in place, you can add smaller things around it if they fit naturally. What usually does not work is planning three major attractions in different parts of a city and then acting shocked when the day becomes a sweaty logistics exercise.
One main anchor a day does not make a trip boring. It makes it doable.
Do not plan like a twenty-something backpacker
This is where Bangkok enters the story, dragging a very smug lesson behind it. I once thought I knew better than the travel agency and added a full afternoon temple tour through Bangkok to a morning cycling tour. This was after a long journey and a short night. With jet lag. In tropical heat and humidity.
On paper, it looked efficient. Very sensible. Very ambitious. Very me, at the time. In reality, it was dreadful. I did not enjoy the temples. Not because the temples were not beautiful. They were. The problem was that by the time I got there, I was tired, overheated, and in absolutely no state to appreciate anything beyond the existence of shade. You can read more about it in my Biking through Bangkok post.
That day was incredibly useful, because it cured me of a certain type of itinerary arrogance. A plan is not good just because it technically fits into the day. It also has to be enjoyable for the person doing it. That person is, annoyingly, a human being with a body and a mood.
So when you plan, think beyond opening hours and travel times. Think about whether you will be jetlagged and how hot and humid it will be. Consider how physically demanding other activities are and how much walking is involved. Decide whether you still want to be out and about by mid afternoon, or would prefer to be in an airconditioned room, or in a nice shaded pool? And remember: you don’t have to prove anything to anyone. Not even to twenty-something backpackers.
Group things by area, not by enthusiasm
Another classic itinerary mistake is planning by excitement instead of geography. You pick your favourite-looking things, scatter them across a map, and end up spending half your holiday in transit.
A better approach is to group each day by area. Choose a neighbourhood, district, side of the city, or route, and build that day around it. If you are on a road trip, think in terms of sensible stops and driving time. If you are in a city, think in terms of walkability, public transport, and how often you want to double back on yourself.
This one change makes an itinerary feel calmer almost immediately. It cuts down on wasted time, reduces decision fatigue, and leaves far more room for the bits of travel that are actually pleasant.
Leave room for delays, detours, and changing your mind
A good itinerary should have some breathing space in it. Not endless empty hours. Just enough room for the inevitable delays and queues. For weather changes and sudden tiredness. For long lunches and much-needed coffee breaks. For that view that turns out the be much better than expected. If every hour is spoken for, the whole plan becomes brittle. One delay and suddenly the day is wobbling like a badly stacked suitcase.
On the other hand, don’t let the itinerary dictate what you “have to” do and see. You don’t “have to” do anything. If the Musée d’Orsay takes up a full day on your itinerary but after three Monets you start to think “Oh look, more gardens”: nobody is forcing you to see the rest. Although leaving would make you miss Van Gogh’s Starry Night. I stared at that one for fifteen minutes so I’d not skip that one. But I digress. What I’m saying is: a good plan should help you feel calmer, not punish you for being slightly slower than your planner expected.

Keep the important details with the plan
This is not glamorous, but it is useful. A day plan becomes much more helpful when it includes the practical things too: booking times, ticket notes, transport details, check-in reminders, opening hours, addresses, tour confirmations, guide’s phone numbers. To put it simply: anything future-you will be deeply annoyed to look up again while standing on a pavement should be in the plan.
I like having the outline of the day and the practical details together because it means less rummaging around later. Partly because I am a pathologically organised person these days, but mostly because I enjoy not having to search my inbox for a reservation email while pretending I am calm.
A useful itinerary is better than a perfect one
This is the bit I wish more people heard. Your itinerary does not need to be perfect. It needs to be usable. A clear plan you can actually follow is far better than a dazzling plan that falls apart before lunch. The goal is not to win at travel by completing the most attractions in the shortest amount of time. The goal is to enjoy the place you spent time and money getting to.
Usually that means knowing what matters most: the must-sees and must-dos. It means allowing more time than you think you need. A bit like money: the time buffer. It means leaving enough flexibility to change your mind without the whole thing collapsing, and it means keeping useful details in one place.
The planner I use to organise all of this
Because I wanted a better way to turn scattered notes into a usable trip plan, I created an itinerary planner for exactly this stage of travel planning. There is a free simple version if you want something light and easy for one trip. There is also a fuller interactive version if you want more flexibility, more structure, and a planner that adapts better to different kinds of trips.

A good itinerary should help your trip, not run it
A trip does not become better because you managed to schedule more of it. Usually, it becomes better when the plan is clear enough that you can relax into it. That means knowing what you want to do, where you want to do it, and what matters most each day, while still leaving enough room for travel to be what it always is: slightly unpredictable, occasionally inconvenient, and often much more enjoyable than your original plan allowed for.
That is the kind of itinerary I try to build now. Less frantic ticking off. More actually being there.
Planned your itinerary and would like to keep track of costs so it doesn’t bankrupt you in the process? Find more information in my travel budget guide. It has a budget planning tool to help you out.
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