Buyer's guide · 2026

How to choose a travel budget app.

There isn't one "best travel budget app". There's the one that fits how you travel. This guide walks through the criteria that actually matter, the honest trade-offs of each kind of tool, and where a dedicated app like PocketTrip earns its place (and where it doesn't).

The criteria

Seven things that actually matter

Every travel expense app comparison ends up as a feature checklist. That's fine, as long as you weigh each feature by how often it'll actually save you. Here's what to test before you trust an app with a whole trip.

Start with speed

The best predictor of whether you'll stick with a budget app is how fast it is to log one expense. If adding a coffee takes four taps and a menu, you'll give up by day two, and an abandoned tracker is worse than no tracker at all, because it lies to you. Open a candidate app, picture yourself at a café counter, and time yourself. Anything over about ten seconds is a warning sign.

  • Speed of logging: can you add an expense from the first screen, without digging?
  • Multi-currency & live rates: log in local money and see your home total worked out for you.
  • Receipt scanning: pull the details off a photo instead of typing them in.
  • Expense splitting: fair shares and a clean settle-up when you travel with others.
  • Privacy & on-device data: your spending stays yours, not sitting on someone's server.
  • Offline & widgets: works with no signal, and shows a total at a glance from your Home Screen.
  • One-time purchase & iPad: no forced subscription, and a proper large-screen layout.

The options, honestly

Five kinds of tool, and their real trade-offs

"App" is a broad word. Before you download anything, it helps to know which category of tool you're really choosing between, because they fail in very different ways.

📝

Notes app

Free and already on your phone. Great for a jotted list on a short solo trip. But you'll do every currency conversion by hand, there's no budget to push against, and the totals never add themselves up. Fine as a stopgap, painful for a real trip.

📊

Spreadsheet

Endlessly flexible, and genuinely capable if you enjoy building one. The catch is that you have to build and maintain it, entering rows on a phone keyboard is slow, and live exchange rates and receipt capture are hard to bolt on. Best for planners who love a template.

🏦

Bank or card app

Accurate to the cent and no manual entry needed, since the transaction just appears. But it only sees spending on that one card, it can lag a day or two, cash is invisible to it, and it won't split a bill or hold a trip budget. A useful cross-check, not a trip tracker.

💼

General expense app

Built for business receipts and reimbursement. Solid at logging and exporting, but the workflow is aimed at a finance department, not a holiday. You often get no per-trip budget, no way to split with friends, and a subscription priced for companies.

✈️

Dedicated travel app

Built for exactly this: a trip budget, fast multi-currency entry, receipt scanning, splitting and a map of where your money went. The trade-off is one more app to install, which is worth it if you travel regularly and overkill for a single afternoon out.

🧭

Which fits you?

Occasional, solo, one currency? A notes app is fine. Frequent trips, cash and cards, several currencies, sometimes with friends? That's the point where a dedicated app stops being a luxury and starts saving you real money and a few arguments.

Full disclosure

Where PocketTrip fits, and where it doesn't

PocketTrip is our app, so treat this as us showing our working against the criteria above, not a neutral verdict. We built it around the tests we think matter most, and we'll be straight about who it isn't for.

Who it's for

PocketTrip is made for people travelling with an iPhone or iPad who want to log spending in seconds, across currencies, without handing their financial history to a company's servers. It opens straight to an add-expense screen, converts local money to your home currency at live rates, scans receipts on-device, splits shared costs and pins every expense on a map. Your data stays on your device and syncs through your own iCloud.

The free tier covers one trip and up to 25 expenses, which is enough to test it over a weekend. Pro gives you unlimited trips and expenses at € 4,99/month or € 19,99/year, and there's a € 49,99 lifetime option if you'd rather pay once and never see a subscription again.

  • Log an expense in any currency, fast
  • Live exchange rates back to your home currency
  • On-device receipt scanning, with nothing uploaded
  • Split shared costs and settle up cleanly
  • Home & Lock Screen widgets, an iPad layout, and it works offline
  • One-time lifetime purchase available

Where it isn't the right pick: if you're on Android, PocketTrip is iOS-only today. If you only ever take one short domestic trip a year in your own currency, a notes app will do the job for free. And if you need formal business reimbursement workflows and approvals, a proper expense-management tool will serve you better than a travel app. We'd rather you land on the right tool than force-fit ours.

FAQ

Choosing a travel budget app, answered

Is a dedicated travel budget app worth it?

If you travel more than once a year, spend in more than one currency, or split costs with other people, a dedicated app usually pays for itself in the time it saves and the surprises it spares you. A notes app or spreadsheet is fine for a simple solo trip, but it falls apart the moment you need live exchange rates, receipt capture or a fair split. The best travel budget app is the one you'll actually open at the table, so how fast it is to log something matters more than any feature list.

Are there good free travel budget apps?

Yes. Plenty of travel budget apps, PocketTrip included, have a free tier that covers a single trip. PocketTrip's free version handles one trip and up to 25 expenses, which is plenty to try it on a weekend away. When you want unlimited trips and expenses you can move up to Pro, and there's a one-time lifetime purchase if you'd rather not deal with a subscription.

Which travel budget app is best for privacy?

Look for an app that keeps your data on your device instead of on a company's servers, and that reads receipts on-device rather than uploading them. PocketTrip stores your trips locally and syncs only through your own iCloud account, and its receipt scanning runs on the phone itself, so photos of your receipts never leave it.

What features should a travel budget app have?

The essentials are quick expense entry, multi-currency support with live exchange rates, a clear budget or daily cap, and a breakdown of spending by category and day. The extras that separate a great app from an average one are on-device receipt scanning, expense splitting for groups, offline support, Home and Lock Screen widgets, and real iPad support.

Try it against your own tests

See how PocketTrip stacks up on your next trip.

Free on the App Store for iPhone & iPad. One trip and 25 expenses, no account required. Move up to Pro whenever you need more.