TriParrot
Agent-first travel document organizer & ADHD-friendly reminder system

What it does
TriParrot turns scattered booking confirmations into a single, organized timeline with reminders. It parses emails, screenshots, and pasted text to create itineraries, offers day-of countdowns, packing memory that learns from past trips, and partner sharing. It also provides an MCP server and REST API so AI agents (like Claude, Cursor, OpenClaw, Hermes) can access trip data. The service is web-first, works on any device with a browser, and does not require an app download.
Who it is for
TriParrot is built for travelers who want to stop holding trip details in their head. It is especially designed for people with ADHD, as the founder built it because his "brain stops working at airports." It suits solo travelers, couples, families, and group trips. It also targets developers and AI agent users who want their tools to answer travel questions from real data.
Why it matters
Travel booking confirmations are often scattered across email, screenshots, and chat messages. TriParrot consolidates them into a single timeline with proactive reminders, reducing mental load and the risk of missing a flight or hotel check-in. Its packing memory learns from past trips (e.g., reminding you to pack a passport if you forgot it before). Partner sharing is included on every paid plan, and public share links let others see your itinerary without logging in. The MCP/REST API makes trip data accessible to AI agents, enabling new workflows.
Launch signal
TriParrot is live with a working demo, paid plans (Trip Pass $24.99, Annual $59.99/year, Monthly $5.99/month), and a developer hub. It has been trained on 10,000+ real booking confirmations. The founder, Julian, has shared a personal story about building it for his ADHD. The product is listed on Uneed Best with 68 upvotes.
Brand and naming
The name "TriParrot" is a portmanteau of "trip" and "parrot," suggesting a tool that remembers and repeats travel details for you. It is short, distinctive, and easy to pronounce, though the connection to ADHD may not be immediately obvious. The domain triparrot.com is memorable and available. The tagline and website clearly position it as an agent-first travel document organizer with ADHD-friendly features, but the dual focus on travel and ADHD could dilute the core message.
Founder
Julian
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