Travel Footprint
Visualize the countries you've visited — and how your time is distributed across the world. Add countries quickly, or enter trips with dates to see days counted.
Last reviewed
Countries you've visited
Type to add a country. Click any chip below to remove it.
Manual tracking creates long-term data risk
People may remember countries, but not how long they spent in each place. Time across cities, states, and countries is rarely tracked consistently.
Trips blur together over time. Short stays, layovers, and transitions are among the first things forgotten — exactly the kinds of details that matter when the record is examined later.
Most people don't have an accurate record of how their time is actually distributed across the world.
You remember the countries. The time is what goes missing.
Short stays, transitions, and exact durations blur first.
Chrono tracks every day automatically.
The answer is always current.
Let Chrono keep the record for you
Scan to install. Chrono starts tracking immediately.
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Related: tax residency · Schengen · US state residency · Travel Itinerary Planner .
Questions
- Does a layover count as a country I've visited?
- By the standard definition, only if you cleared immigration into the country. Airside transit through an international terminal generally doesn't count as a visit.
- How is this different from a passport-stamp count?
- Passport stamps are a partial record. Many countries no longer stamp on entry, others stamp inconsistently, and visa-free travelers within open-border blocs like Schengen often skip stamping entirely. A day-by-day record fills the gap stamps leave.
- Why count days in addition to countries visited?
- Time in a place changes the relationship — to taxes, to residency, to memory. A country stamp is a moment; a day count is a continuous record of where you actually were.
- Can I get my own travel history from the government?
- Partially. Non-US citizens can pull their US entries from the CBP I-94 portal; US citizens don't have an equivalent self-service entry record. Schengen border crossings will be captured by the EU Entry/Exit System as it rolls out. All of these are partial records, not a complete log.
