The frustration with most travel apps is that they were designed for two adults, maybe four. Adding a fifth or sixth traveler either breaks the interface or requires upgrading to a business plan. The apps below either handle large groups natively or are general-purpose enough that group size is not a constraint.
What to look for in a family travel planning app
Unlimited collaborators — both parents and any traveling grandparents should be able to view and edit without paying per seat
Per-person packing lists — a single combined list for 6 people is less useful than 6 individual lists that can be checked off independently
Offline access — at least read-only access to the itinerary when you don\'t have mobile data at your destination
Expense tracking — not all apps include this; if yours doesn\'t, pair it with Splitwise
The apps we use most on big-family trips
TripIt Pro and Wanderlog handle the itinerary layer well. PackPoint handles the packing layer. Splitwise handles the money layer. Most families of 6+ end up using 2-3 apps in combination rather than one app that does everything mediocrely.
For the pre-booking research phase, our room finder, budget calculator, and difficulty rater fill in the gaps that commercial apps don\'t address: actual occupancy compliance, true per-person trip cost, and destination suitability for your specific family configuration.
A note on app fatigue
Every app you add requires every adult traveler to install, learn, and check it. For most families, two apps maximum is the right number. Pick one for itinerary and one for expenses, and do the rest in a shared spreadsheet or document that everyone can already open without downloading anything.



