We help you dream bigger.

Wanderlust Weaver is built by a tiny team of travel obsessives — inspired by the weaver bird, who patiently threads together intricate nests from a thousand small choices. We use the best AI models to turn your destination, days and style into a vivid, actionable plan in seconds — and our human experts step in when you want something fully bespoke.

We believe travel is a right for everyone.

Not a luxury reserved for the few. Discovering new places, meeting new people, and stepping outside your comfort zone shapes who we become — and we think the joy of planning a trip shouldn't be locked behind expensive consultants or hours of research.

That's why we're harnessing the power of AI: to give every traveler — backpacker or honeymooner, first-timer or seasoned explorer — the tools to craft a richer, more personal journey. Wherever you're headed, we want your next trip to be the best one yet.

AI-powered

Streaming previews and full itineraries crafted by leading AI models, tuned for real-world travel.

Free to start, unlimited tries

Generate as many trips as you want, view the full day-by-day plan and download a PDF — all without paying a cent.

Pay per trip — no subscriptions

When you want the premium toolkit on a specific trip, unlock it once. No recurring charges, ever.

Meet the founders

Wanderlust Weaver was started by Nikos and Natasha, a couple who have spent the last decade chasing sunrises across more than 70 countries — from quiet Greek islands to the back roads of Vietnam. They met while planning a trip neither of them could quite afford, and discovered they both loved the planning almost as much as the going.

Nikos is a business manager with a deep passion for travel and a stubborn belief that great trips shouldn't be reserved for those who can afford a consultant. He spends his weekends figuring out how to make exploring the world simpler, cheaper and more accessible for everyone.

Natasha is a philologist and incurably curious mind who collects human travel stories the way other people collect fridge magnets — from memoirs and old journals to the strangers she ends up chatting with on overnight trains. She makes sure every itinerary reads like something a friend wrote, not a spreadsheet.

They still test every feature on their own trips. If something feels clunky on a phone at a train station in a country they don't speak the language of, it gets fixed before you ever see it.