10 printable pages
Travel Planners
Pack lighter, plan smarter.
Travel planner pages cover itineraries, packing lists, budgets, and reservation logs in one place so a trip stays calm from the booking stage through the return flight.
Trip Itinerary Page
A multi-day trip itinerary page with day-by-day plans, addresses, and reservation numbers.
Packing List Page
A packing list page organised by category: clothes, toiletries, tech, documents.
Travel Budget Tracker
A page for tracking travel spending against a daily budget by category.
Pre-Trip Checklist
A pre-trip checklist for the week before departure: documents, home prep, pet care.
Flight & Hotel Log
A page for logging flight and hotel reservations with confirmation numbers.
Road Trip Planner
A road trip planner with route legs, drive-time estimates, and overnight stops.
Travel Memories Page
A travel memories page for noting favourite meals, places, and small moments per day.
Carry-On Packing Card
A packing card sized for the carry-on suitcase with the items for a short trip.
Family Vacation Planner
A family vacation planner with one row per family member and shared activity slots.
Weekend Getaway Planner
A planner sized for a two-night weekend trip — packing, food, and one must-do per day.
About the Travel Planners collection
The Travel Planners collection on PlannerPages is built for adults who want a paper-based system without committing to a full pre-printed planner from a stationery brand. Each page in this category stands alone: print one, try it for a week, and decide whether the layout fits the way you actually think.
Every page in the collection is sized for both US Letter and A4 paper, with binding-friendly margins. The pages are designed to print cleanly on inkjet and laser printers in colour or grayscale, so you can keep your printer settings on draft and still get a usable page.
If you are new to paper planning, start with the simplest page in the list — the one with the fewest fields. The most common mistake is printing the most ambitious layout first, then giving up after three days because the page is doing too much. Build the habit first, then move to a denser page when the simpler one stops being enough.