Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Furkot is an online trip route-planning tool whose core use case is helping users plan multi-day itineraries on a map with real travel dates. Users can choose destinations, have the system calculate the time needed to get there, and arrange routes and overnight stops based on daily driving-time limits. It supports road trips, motorcycle trips, cycling, walking, and other travel modes, positioning it more as a personal travel-planning SaaS than traditional enterprise management software.
Based on the main content, Furkot’s strength lies in continuous planning across “routes + stops + accommodation.” Users do not have to manually organize the order of stops first—the system attempts to plan a more efficient route. If efficiency is not the priority, users can also drag stops around or reverse the itinerary. Furkot can suggest places to stay based on timing and preferences, and users can add restaurants, gas stations, museums, national parks, viewpoints, ski resorts, hiking trails, and other points of interest along the route. For accommodation, Furkot can display hotels, campgrounds, apartments, and other options on the map, and when redirecting to booking sites, it pre-fills check-in and check-out dates to reduce the risk of booking the wrong dates.
The page does not disclose plans, subscription pricing, a free tier, or trial policy. What can be confirmed is that its revenue model includes at least third-party referral commissions: when users click links to AllTrails, Booking.com, Expedia, Hotels.com, Amazon, and similar sites and then complete bookings or purchases, the site may earn a commission. In terms of integrations, it supports login via Facebook, Google, Foursquare, and Tripit, and uses external data or content sources such as OpenStreetMap, Wikipedia, AllTrails, Liftopia, and pure-gas.org.
The main advantage is that its itinerary-planning logic is fairly complete, especially for multi-city, multi-day road-trip or cycling routes. Daily driving-time constraints and overnight-stop suggestions help make plans more realistic. The downside is that the main content does not mention team collaboration, permissions, APIs, auditing, security compliance, or self-hosting, so it is not suitable to evaluate as an enterprise travel-management system. Hotel booking also depends on third-party platforms, meaning payments, prices, and after-sales support are not fully controlled by Furkot.
Furkot is well suited to individual users planning road trips, motorcycle tours, cycling trips, hikes, or long-distance cross-region travel in Europe and North America. It is also useful for travel enthusiasts who want to schedule attractions, accommodation, and routes in one place. The main content does not disclose access conditions from China, and because its login, maps, and third-party services involve ecosystems such as Google and Facebook, users in mainland China may encounter uncertainty when logging in, loading maps, or being redirected to booking sites. Alternatives include Google Maps, Roadtrippers, Komoot, TripIt, as well as China-based tools such as Amap and Baidu Maps.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on furkot.it official site.
furkot.it is an United States Travel provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach furkot.it directly.