Hotels matter
Choose the stay for its rhythm, service, and neighborhood, not only the star rating.
Private travel planning · pilot 2026
For travelers who care where they sleep, where they eat, and how a day should feel. Inkvie learns your sources, rhythm, and dealbreakers, then shapes itineraries with options you can stand behind.
Cover photograph by Sora Sagano for Unsplash.
The premise
It understands that a better hotel can be the right splurge, that lunch may deserve the whole afternoon, and that the most luxurious plan is often the one with room to breathe.
Modest luxury
This is for travelers who are happy to spend when the spend changes the trip: the right hotel, a memorable counter, a quieter transfer, a guide with taste.
Hotels matter
Choose the stay for its rhythm, service, and neighborhood, not only the star rating.
Meals anchor the day
Let the best reservations create structure instead of squeezing them between errands.
Time is part of taste
Build in the walk, the slow morning, and the better room before dinner.
On-ramps
Drop in saved guides, private notes, restaurant lists, screenshots, PDFs, or nothing at all. Inkvie reads the signal, not just the place names, and keeps learning from what you save or skip.
Selection 1 / 4
Tokyo
Kissaten mornings, omakase dinners, quiet gardens.
The plan
Every slot can carry two or three choices: the grand dinner, the neighborhood room, the quieter alternate with better timing. The planner advises without flattening your taste into one answer.
The rhythm
A good trip is not measured by how much you fit in. Inkvie keeps geography, opening hours, meal pacing, and transfer time in view, then adjusts when you decide the afternoon belongs to one place.
What the app keeps in view
A trip gets better when those details stay connected. The board, plan, and map are different views of the same taste profile.
Open the demo to see how Inkvie shapes a sample week in Tokyo with taste, budget, timing, and tradeoffs in view.