plan-tour-route
Plan Tour Route
Plan and optimize a multi-stop tour route with time estimates, distance calculations, and points of interest along the way.
When to Use
- Planning a road trip or walking tour with multiple destinations
- Optimizing visit order to minimize total travel time or distance
- Discovering restaurants, viewpoints, or cultural sites along a route
- Generating a day-by-day itinerary with realistic time budgets
- Comparing driving vs. walking vs. public transport options
Inputs
- Required: List of waypoints (place names, addresses, or coordinates)
- Required: Travel mode (driving, walking, cycling, public transport)
- Optional: Start and end points (if different from first/last waypoint)
- Optional: Time constraints (departure time, must-arrive-by, opening hours)
- Optional: POI categories to discover (food, viewpoints, museums, fuel)
- Optional: Preferred route type (fastest, shortest, scenic)
Procedure
Step 1: Define Waypoints
Collect and structure all stops the tour must include.
Waypoint Schema:
┌──────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Field │ Description │
├──────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ name │ Human-readable label for the stop │
│ address │ Street address or place name │
│ lat/lon │ Coordinates (if known; otherwise geocode) │
│ duration │ Time to spend at this stop (minutes) │
│ priority │ Must-visit vs. nice-to-have │
│ hours │ Opening/closing times (if applicable) │
│ notes │ Parking, accessibility, booking required │
└──────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Separate fixed-order waypoints (e.g., hotel at start and end) from reorderable waypoints.
Expected: A structured list of all waypoints with at minimum a name and either an address or coordinates for each.
On failure: If a waypoint is ambiguous (e.g., "the castle"), use WebSearch to resolve it to a specific location. If coordinates are needed but only a name is available, defer to Step 2 for geocoding.
Step 2: Geocode and Validate
Convert all waypoints to latitude/longitude coordinates and verify they are reachable.
Geocoding Sources (in preference order):
1. Nominatim (OpenStreetMap) - free, no key required
https://nominatim.openstreetmap.org/search?q=QUERY&format=json
2. Overpass API - for POI-type queries
https://overpass-api.de/api/interpreter
3. Manual coordinates from mapping services
For each waypoint:
- Query the geocoding service with the address or place name
- Verify the returned coordinates are in the expected region
- Check that multiple results are disambiguated (pick the correct one)
- Store coordinates alongside the original waypoint data
Expected: Every waypoint has valid latitude/longitude coordinates, and all points fall within a plausible geographic region (no outliers on wrong continents).
On failure: If geocoding returns no results, try alternative spellings, add region/country qualifiers, or search for nearby landmarks. If a waypoint is in a remote area with poor OSM coverage, use WebSearch to find coordinates from travel blogs or tourism sites.
Step 3: Optimize Route Order
Determine the visit sequence that minimizes total travel time or distance.
Optimization Strategies:
┌─────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Strategy │ When to use │
├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Fixed order │ Stops must be visited in given sequence│
│ Nearest neighbor │ Quick approximation for 5-15 stops │
│ TSP solver │ Optimal ordering for any number │
│ Time-window aware │ Stops have opening hours constraints │
│ Cluster-then-route │ Stops span multiple days/regions │
└─────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────┘
For the nearest-neighbor heuristic:
- Start at the designated origin
- From the current position, select the unvisited waypoint closest by travel time
- Move to that waypoint and mark it visited
- Repeat until all waypoints are visited
- Return to the designated end point (if round trip)
For multi-day tours, cluster waypoints by geographic proximity first, then optimize within each day.
Expected: An ordered sequence of waypoints that produces a route without excessive backtracking. Total distance should be within 20% of the theoretical optimum for fewer than 10 stops.
On failure: If the nearest-neighbor result has obvious backtracking (later stops are closer to earlier ones), try reversing the route or use a 2-opt improvement: swap pairs of edges and keep the swap if it shortens the route. For time-window constraints, verify that arrival times at each stop fall within opening hours.
Step 4: Calculate Times and Distances
Compute travel time and distance for each leg of the route.
Time Estimation Methods:
┌──────────────┬────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
│ Mode │ Avg Speed │ Notes │
├──────────────┼────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
│ Highway │ 100 km/h │ Varies by country/road type │
│ Rural road │ 60 km/h │ Add 20% for winding roads │
│ City driving │ 30 km/h │ Add time for parking │
│ Walking │ 4.5 km/h │ Flat terrain; reduce for hills │
│ Cycling │ 15 km/h │ Touring pace with luggage │
│ Hiking │ 3-4 km/h │ Use Munter formula for accuracy│
└──────────────┴────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
For each consecutive pair of waypoints:
- Calculate straight-line (haversine) distance as a baseline
- Apply a detour factor (1.3 for roads, 1.4 for urban, 1.2 for highways)
- Estimate travel time from adjusted distance and mode speed
- Add buffer time: 10% for driving, 15% for public transport
- Sum leg times plus dwell times at each stop for total tour duration
Expected: A time/distance matrix for all legs, with a running cumulative time that accounts for both travel and dwell time at each stop. Total tour duration should be realistic (not exceeding available daylight for walking tours).
On failure: If estimated times seem unrealistic (e.g., 2 hours for a 10 km city drive), check whether the detour factor is appropriate. For mountain roads, increase the detour factor to 1.6-2.0. For public transport, use WebSearch to check actual timetables rather than estimating.
Step 5: Generate Itinerary with POIs
Compile the optimized route into a complete itinerary with discovered points of interest.
POI Discovery (Overpass API query pattern):
[out:json];
(
node["tourism"="viewpoint"](around:RADIUS,LAT,LON);
node["amenity"="restaurant"](around:RADIUS,LAT,LON);
node["amenity"="cafe"](around:RADIUS,LAT,LON);
);
out body;
Recommended search radius:
- Along route corridor: 500 m for walking, 2 km for driving
- At waypoints: 1 km radius
Build the itinerary document:
- Header with tour name, dates, total distance, total time
- For each day (if multi-day):
- Day summary (start, end, total km, total hours)
- For each leg: departure time, travel mode, distance, duration
- For each stop: arrival time, dwell time, description, POIs nearby
- Logistics section: parking, fuel stops, rest areas, emergency contacts
- Map reference (link to route on OpenStreetMap or export as GPX)
Expected: A complete, time-budgeted itinerary document with realistic schedules, POI suggestions at each stop, and practical logistics information.
On failure: If POI queries return too many results, filter by rating or relevance. If the itinerary exceeds available time, mark lower-priority stops as optional or split into additional days. If no POIs are found in remote areas, note this and suggest the traveler research locally on arrival.
Validation
- All waypoints are geocoded with valid coordinates
- Route order minimizes backtracking (no obvious inefficiencies)
- Travel times are realistic for the chosen mode
- Dwell times at each stop are accounted for
- Total tour duration fits within the available time window
- POIs are relevant and located near the route
- Opening hours of time-sensitive stops are respected
- Itinerary includes practical logistics (parking, fuel, rest stops)
Common Pitfalls
- Ignoring opening hours: Optimizing purely by distance can route you to a museum after it closes. Always check time-window constraints for attractions.
- Underestimating urban travel: City driving and parking can double the expected time. Add generous buffers for urban stops.
- Over-packing the itinerary: Filling every minute leaves no room for delays or spontaneous discoveries. Build in 30-60 minutes of slack per half-day.
- Straight-line distance fallacy: Haversine distance severely underestimates actual road distance, especially in mountainous or coastal terrain. Always apply a detour factor.
- Forgetting return logistics: One-way routes need plans for returning rental cars, catching trains, or arranging pickup.
- Seasonal road closures: Mountain passes, ferries, and scenic routes may be closed seasonally. Verify access dates before routing.
Related Skills
create-spatial-visualization— render the planned route on an interactive mapgenerate-tour-report— compile the itinerary into a formatted Quarto reportplan-hiking-tour— specialized planning for hiking segments within a tourassess-trail-conditions— check conditions for any walking/hiking legs