A travel app.
For everyone told the world is not theirs to walk freely.
We built Travel Keepers because the alternative, telling women to stay home, stay cautious, stay small, was never good enough.
The world belongs to everyone. Keep travelling.
Women are not prey. The world should stop treating them like they are.
Most travel advice for women is just fear repackaged: don't go there, don't walk alone, don't go out after dark. It treats caution as the whole strategy. We think information is a better one, as a small act against a system that relies on silence.
Government advisories tell you whether a city is safe. We tell you where in the city to go — which neighborhoods women walk freely, which are fine by day and need a cab after dark, and which to skip entirely. That's the difference between a warning and a plan.
Travel Keepers is this, in a nutshell. Every vetted neighborhood, every honest “take a cab after ten,” every Keeper who leaves a note for the women coming next. We won't fix women's safety with an app. But we can make it safer for a woman to arrive somewhere she doesn't know, alone, with no one on her side.
The app is a travel tool. The reason it exists is bigger than that.
Four chapters. One thesis.
Chapter I · Today
AI briefings for any city.
Open any city, get a safety briefing in under 20 seconds. Free, always. What you're reading now.
Chapter II · Late 2026
Vetted by real keepers.
Verified women adding the places they've trusted, with photos, dates, and identity verification that proves they're real. Community trust in the age of AI.
Chapter III · 2027
Plan it. Book it. We earn when you stay.
Turn any briefing into a full trip plan: day-by-day itineraries, vetted hotels, tours, restaurants. Affiliate-funded so briefings stay free.
Chapter IV · Beyond
Everyone the world made small.
Same intelligence layer, expanded for LGBTQ+ travelers, families, elderly travelers, for anyone who's been told the world isn't theirs.
The north star
Anti-trafficking intelligence, where we're headed.
Every Keeper who verifies a hotel is a set of eyes the traffickers don't have. Over time, the same briefing surface carries red flags for coercive transit patterns, airport pickup scams, hotels that don't ask questions, neighborhoods where a woman alone reads as a target. Not a separate app. A deeper answer to the same question.