Trip Tabs Explained

What lives in each tab and when to use it.

Long trip pages would be unwieldy as one flat scroll, so the trip page splits into five tabs. Click any tab to switch; the URL updates with a hash so you can deep-link.

Overview

The trip’s narrative description and any high-level context you’ve written. Default tab when opening a trip. If you haven’t written a description yet, this tab shows a placeholder prompting you to add one.

Itinerary

The ordered list of stops, with drag-to-reorder for editors. Each stop card shows title, dates, status, and notes. Includes the Add stop button and the helpful drag-to-reorder tip.

Crew & Gear

Two things in one tab:

  • Crew — the trip’s members (planner + invited + placeholders). Owner can invite, remove, manage.
  • Checklist — items everyone’s bringing, with assignment to specific crew members. See The Collaborative Checklist.

Links & POIs

Custom links and custom map markers. See Custom Links and POIs.

Wrap-up

Post-trip section. Only appears prominently after the trip end date (or you can switch to it manually any time). Place for ratings, condition reports, photos from the actual runs. The trip planning happens in the other tabs; the wrap-up is where you reflect after the fact.

The “On your list” callout

This is NOT a tab — it floats above the tabs. Only appears when you’re a member of the trip AND you have gear items assigned to you. Shows you those items with checkboxes so you can mark them packed without having to dig through tabs. The most useful glance-view for active crew members.

The AI builder

Also not a tab. Floats below the tabs (owner-only). A planning assistant that helps you suggest stops, write descriptions, and structure your itinerary. Owner-curated — its output is suggestions, not auto-published content.

Deep-linking

You can link directly to a tab using URL hashes:

  • #overview
  • #itinerary
  • #crew or #checklist
  • #links-pois, #links, or #pois
  • #wrapup

Useful in notification emails and shared links — you can point a crew member directly to the checklist instead of the trip homepage.

Print view

Printing the trip page flattens all tabs into one continuous document. Tabs hide; all content shows. Useful for a paper trip sheet you bring along in the rig.