A stamp for every place.
Tap any city in your atlas to slam a passport stamp on it. Streaks, eras, milestones. The simple satisfaction of marking the page — without the airport stop-over to earn it.
OTrip turns the photos already on your phone into a slow, beautiful record of everywhere you've been — stamps, journals, atlases — without a single byte leaving your device.
A taste of OTrip without the App Store. Tap the cities you've been to; we'll hand back the map, the totals, the goals — and a passport you can save when you're ready.
Play the recap
Not a social app. Not a tracker. A quiet, paper-shaped tool for the memories you already collected — and the ones you haven't yet.
Tap any city in your atlas to slam a passport stamp on it. Streaks, eras, milestones. The simple satisfaction of marking the page — without the airport stop-over to earn it.
OTrip reads the dates and cities from your camera roll — locally, on-device — and proposes the trips you forgot to log. Approve, reshape, or skip. It learns your shape.
Zoom from continent to neighbourhood. Filter by year, era, or trip. See the shape of a life in pins — and the empty corners still waiting for one.
A travel app shouldn't feel like another inbox.
It should feel like the worn leather notebook
you keep on the shelf — opened only when
you want to remember.
We started with one rule: nothing leaves the device. Every photo, every location, every stamp — on your phone, only. We don't have your data because we don't want it.
Travel is the only purchase that grows more valuable the longer you own it. OTrip is the shelf you put it on.
OTrip started in seat 1A of an SFO redeye in 2023, scrolling through five years of camera roll and realising that everywhere I had ever been was already in there — just buried, unsorted, slowly forgetting itself.
It's still a team of one. I write the code, design the stamps, answer the email, and ship the app when it's ready instead of when a roadmap says so. Travel deserves software that remembers the way you do: slowly, in fragments, with the smell of the place still in it.
No investors, no growth team, no dark patterns — just a long, quiet bet that good craft still finds its audience. If any of that resonates, I'd love to hear where you've been lately.
Free to download. Free to keep. The first trip you log might be the one you'd already half-forgotten.