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Road Trip Budget Categories: What to Include Before You Hit the Road

By Craig Watts - Founder @ Trip Tracka· 20 min read
Road trip budget categories displayed on a laptop beside a caravan, 4WD, map, notebook, keys and fuel receipt at a scenic campsite.

Road Trip Budget Categories: What to Include Before You Hit the Road

A road trip always sounds simple at the start.

Pick a destination.
Pack the car.
Fuel up.
Start driving.

But once the trip begins, the costs start showing up everywhere.

Fuel.
Food.
Accommodation.
Campsites.
Coffee stops.
Activities.
Tolls.
Parking.
Repairs.
Laundry.
Gear.
Internet.
Emergency costs.

Before you know it, the trip that felt cheap in your head costs far more than expected.

That is why building the right road trip budget categories before you leave is one of the smartest things you can do.

A good road trip budget does not stop you from enjoying the trip. It helps you understand the real cost, make better decisions and avoid nasty surprises later.

Whether you are planning a weekend road trip, caravan holiday, RV adventure, campervan tour, camping trip, full-time travel route or overseas driving holiday, the categories you track matter.

Trip Tracka helps travellers plan budgets, track expenses, log fuel, manage vehicles and organise trip costs in one place.

Start here: Trip Budget Planner


Quick Answer: What Road Trip Budget Categories Should You Include?

A complete road trip budget should include:

  • Fuel or charging
  • Accommodation
  • Campsites
  • Groceries
  • Takeaway, cafes and eating out
  • Activities and attractions
  • National parks and permits
  • Tolls, ferries and parking
  • Vehicle maintenance
  • Caravan, RV or campervan maintenance
  • Repairs and emergency costs
  • Travel gear
  • Laundry and showers
  • Gas, water and utilities
  • Phone and internet
  • Insurance and roadside assistance
  • Kids and pets
  • Health and medical
  • Currency exchange and bank fees
  • Recurring bills
  • Miscellaneous costs
  • Emergency buffer

Most people remember fuel and accommodation.

The real budget damage usually comes from the small categories they forget.

That is why tracking your budget properly matters.

Use Trip Tracka’s Travel Expense Tracker to log costs as they happen and see where your money is really going.


Why Road Trip Budgets Blow Out

Road trips rarely blow the budget because of one big mistake.

They usually blow out because of small daily expenses that nobody tracks.

A few coffees.
A bakery lunch.
A paid campsite.
A bag of ice.
A toll road.
A national park entry.
A replacement hose.
A tyre repair.
A pub meal after a long drive.
A few extra fuel stops.

Each cost feels small at the time.

But over 7 days, 30 days or 6 months on the road, those little expenses can become thousands.

The biggest mistake travellers make is budgeting only for the obvious costs.

A proper road trip budget should include both:

The costs you know are coming
and
The costs that usually surprise you.

Trip Tracka is designed to help with both by letting you plan your budget before the trip and track your real spend while you travel.


Road Trip Budget Categories Checklist

Here is the full list of road trip budget categories to include.

You can copy this into your own budget, spreadsheet or Trip Tracka setup.

Category What To Include
Fuel / Charging Petrol, diesel, LPG, AdBlue, EV charging
Accommodation Hotels, motels, caravan parks, RV parks, campgrounds
Campsites Free camps, paid camps, national park camps, showgrounds
Groceries Supermarket shops, snacks, drinks, pantry items
Eating Out Cafes, bakeries, takeaway, pubs, restaurants
Activities Tours, attractions, museums, cruises, theme parks
Parks & Permits National parks, beach permits, camping permits
Tolls & Parking Toll roads, city parking, secure parking, meters
Ferries & Transport Vehicle ferries, public transport, shuttle buses
Vehicle Maintenance Servicing, oil, filters, tyres, brakes, repairs
Caravan / RV / Campervan Costs Bearings, brakes, plumbing, electrical, seals, tyres
Gear & Replacements Camping gear, hoses, tools, leads, chairs, storage
Laundry & Showers Laundromats, campground washing machines, paid showers
Gas, Water & Utilities LPG bottles, water fills, dump point fees, power
Phone & Internet Mobile data, SIM cards, Starlink, hotspot plans
Insurance & Roadside Travel insurance, vehicle insurance, roadside assistance
Kids & Pets Activities, toys, pet food, vet costs, pet fees
Health & Medical Prescriptions, first aid, doctor visits, medicine
Bank & Currency Fees ATM fees, exchange fees, international card fees
Recurring Bills Subscriptions, loans, rent, mortgage, storage, bills
Emergency Buffer Breakdowns, weather delays, medical, last-minute stays
Miscellaneous Anything that does not fit elsewhere

If you only track five or six categories, you will probably miss the real cost of the trip.


1. Fuel or Charging

Fuel is usually one of the biggest road trip costs.

It matters for:

  • Road trips
  • Caravan trips
  • RV travel
  • Motorhome travel
  • Campervan trips
  • 4WD travel
  • Camping trips
  • Long-distance holidays
  • Full-time travel

Track:

  • Fuel type
  • Litres or gallons
  • Price per litre or gallon
  • Total cost
  • Odometer reading
  • Vehicle
  • Trip
  • Location
  • Cost per kilometre or mile

If you drive an EV, track charging costs instead.

Fuel is not just a budget category. It is one of the best ways to understand what your trip really costs.

For example:

DetailExample
Distance1,800 km
Fuel economy12L/100km
Fuel price$2.10/L
Estimated fuel needed216 litres
Estimated fuel cost$453.60

Formula:

1,800 km × 12 ÷ 100 = 216 litres

216 litres × $2.10 = $453.60

If you are towing a caravan or driving an RV, your fuel use may be much higher.

Track it properly here: Fuel Tracker


2. Accommodation

Accommodation can be cheap or expensive depending on your travel style.

Include:

  • Hotels
  • Motels
  • Caravan parks
  • RV parks
  • Holiday parks
  • Campgrounds
  • Cabins
  • Hostels
  • Airbnbs
  • Farm stays
  • Station stays
  • Showgrounds
  • National park campsites
  • Low-cost camps
  • Free camps

A good budget should separate accommodation from other spending so you can see your average cost per night.

Example:

Stay TypeNightsCost Per NightTotal
Caravan park / RV park5$65$325
Low-cost camp4$20$80
Free camp3$0$0
Motel reset night1$140$140

Total accommodation: $545

Average per night: $41.92

This helps you make smart choices. If your accommodation is too high, add more free or low-cost stays. If you need more comfort, budget for it properly.


3. Campsites and Camping Fees

Camping costs deserve their own category if you camp often.

Include:

  • Campsite fees
  • National park camping fees
  • Booking fees
  • Extra person fees
  • Pet fees
  • Powered site upgrades
  • Firewood
  • Dump point fees
  • Water fill fees
  • Showground fees
  • Farm stay fees

Free camping still has costs.

You may spend extra on fuel, water, gas, solar gear, food storage or laundry while staying off-grid.

That is why it helps to track camping separately instead of hiding it under accommodation.

Useful page: Camping Trip Planner


4. Groceries

Groceries are one of the easiest categories to underestimate.

When you are travelling, grocery costs can change depending on:

  • Location
  • Town size
  • Remote areas
  • Tourist regions
  • Family size
  • Diet
  • Cooking setup
  • Fridge and freezer space
  • How often you stock up

Include:

  • Supermarket shops
  • Meat
  • Fruit and vegetables
  • Pantry items
  • Snacks
  • Drinks
  • Kids’ food
  • Pet food
  • BBQ food
  • Camp meals
  • Ice
  • Bottled water

If you are travelling long-term, groceries become one of your most important categories because they are part of your normal weekly living cost.


5. Takeaway, Cafes and Eating Out

Do not mix eating out with groceries.

This category can quietly blow the budget.

Include:

  • Coffee
  • Bakery stops
  • Takeaway
  • Pub meals
  • Restaurants
  • Food trucks
  • Ice creams
  • Snacks
  • Lunches on travel days
  • Drinks out

A few small stops can add up quickly.

Example:

ItemCost
Two coffees$12
Bakery lunch$38
Ice creams$18
Pub dinner$95

Total: $163

One relaxed food day can cost more than several days of groceries.

That does not mean you should avoid it. Just give it a budget category so you can enjoy it without losing track.


6. Activities and Attractions

A road trip should be fun.

Budgeting for activities means you can say yes to the experiences that matter.

Include:

  • Tours
  • Cruises
  • Theme parks
  • Museums
  • Wildlife parks
  • Lookouts
  • Guided walks
  • Boat hire
  • Scenic flights
  • Local attractions
  • Kids’ activities
  • Adventure activities
  • Cultural experiences
  • Entry tickets

A lot of travellers forget this category and then feel guilty spending money once they arrive.

Do the opposite.

Plan for it.

If experiences are part of the trip, they belong in the budget.


7. National Parks, Permits and Entry Fees

This category is easy to miss.

Include:

  • National park passes
  • State park passes
  • Beach driving permits
  • Camping permits
  • Conservation fees
  • Entry fees
  • Trail permits
  • 4WD permits
  • Fishing permits
  • Boat ramp permits

These costs can vary by country, state, region and season.

If your trip includes national parks, beaches, forests or protected areas, add a separate permit budget before you leave.


8. Tolls, Ferries and Parking

These costs often get forgotten because they happen quickly.

Include:

  • Toll roads
  • City parking
  • Airport parking
  • Secure parking
  • National park parking
  • Ferry crossings
  • Vehicle ferries
  • Barge crossings
  • Public transport
  • Shuttle buses
  • Train transfers
  • Parking apps

This is especially important for city trips, island trips, international travel and routes with bridges, tunnels or ferry crossings.

A single ferry with a vehicle, caravan, RV or motorhome can be expensive.

Give it its own line in the budget.


9. Vehicle Maintenance

Your vehicle is what keeps the trip moving.

Maintenance should never be treated as an afterthought.

Include:

  • Servicing
  • Oil
  • Filters
  • Tyres
  • Brakes
  • Batteries
  • Suspension
  • Wheel alignments
  • Windscreen repairs
  • Wiper blades
  • Fluids
  • Inspections
  • Roadworthy checks
  • Repairs
  • Workshop labour

If you are doing a long road trip, full-time travel or remote travel, set aside a maintenance reserve before you leave.

Trip Tracka helps you keep these records together with the Vehicle Maintenance Log.


10. Caravan, RV, Motorhome or Campervan Maintenance

If you travel with a caravan, RV, motorhome or campervan, you need a separate maintenance category.

Include:

  • Bearings
  • Brakes
  • Tyres
  • Suspension
  • Plumbing repairs
  • Electrical repairs
  • Solar repairs
  • Battery replacements
  • Gas checks
  • Seals
  • Awning repairs
  • Fridge repairs
  • Water pump repairs
  • Hot water system repairs
  • Tow hitch parts
  • Safety checks

This is one of the most important categories for long-term travellers.

A small issue can become expensive if it happens far from home.

Trip Tracka lets you track services, repairs, parts and maintenance history by vehicle or travel setup.

Useful page: Vehicle Maintenance Log


11. Gear and Replacements

Every road trip seems to create gear costs.

Something breaks.
Something gets lost.
Something needs replacing.
Something you forgot becomes urgent.

Include:

  • Camping chairs
  • Tables
  • Hoses
  • Power leads
  • Tools
  • Storage tubs
  • Water filters
  • Recovery gear
  • Cooking gear
  • First aid items
  • Torches
  • Batteries
  • Bedding
  • Backpacks
  • Electronics
  • Spare parts
  • Awning straps
  • Tent pegs

Trip Tracka’s Travel Gear Inventory helps you keep records of gear, purchase prices, receipts and warranties.

This can help with insurance, warranty claims and knowing what you already own before buying more.


12. Laundry, Showers and Utilities

These small costs matter, especially on longer trips.

Include:

  • Laundromats
  • Campground washing machines
  • Dryers
  • Paid showers
  • LPG gas bottles
  • Water fills
  • Dump point fees
  • Power top-ups
  • Firewood
  • Ice
  • Drinking water

Full-time travellers and long-term road trippers should track these as normal living costs.

They are not random extras. They are part of the real cost of staying on the road.


13. Phone and Internet

Internet is now a major travel cost for many people.

Include:

  • Mobile data
  • Extra SIM cards
  • International SIM cards
  • eSIMs
  • Hotspot devices
  • Starlink
  • Roaming fees
  • Phone plans
  • Data top-ups
  • Wi-Fi passes
  • Charging accessories

This category is especially important for:

  • Digital nomads
  • Full-time travellers
  • Remote workers
  • Families homeschooling on the road
  • International travellers
  • Content creators

If you work online while travelling, phone and internet costs are not optional. Budget for them properly.


14. Insurance and Roadside Assistance

These costs may not happen daily, but they are part of the real cost of travel.

Include:

  • Vehicle insurance
  • Caravan insurance
  • RV insurance
  • Travel insurance
  • Health insurance
  • Roadside assistance
  • Breakdown cover
  • Recovery cover
  • Rental excess cover
  • Contents insurance
  • Gear insurance

If you are travelling internationally, make sure you check what is covered before you leave.

Insurance is boring until you need it.

Then it becomes one of the most important things you paid for.


15. Kids and Pets

If you travel with kids or pets, add dedicated budget categories.

For kids, include:

  • Activities
  • Toys
  • Snacks
  • Clothes
  • School supplies
  • Entry tickets
  • Entertainment
  • Medical costs
  • Sports or hobby gear

For pets, include:

  • Pet food
  • Vet costs
  • Medication
  • Pet-friendly accommodation fees
  • Grooming
  • Leads, bowls and bedding
  • Tick, flea or worming treatments
  • Emergency vet visits

Kids and pets can both add joy to a trip.

They can also add costs that are easy to forget.


16. Health and Medical

Health costs should be part of your trip budget, especially for long trips.

Include:

  • Prescriptions
  • Doctor visits
  • Dentist visits
  • First aid supplies
  • Sunscreen
  • Insect repellent
  • Pain relief
  • Allergy medication
  • Medical equipment
  • Travel vaccinations
  • Emergency care
  • Physio or treatment

This category matters even more when travelling remotely or overseas.


17. Bank Fees, Currency and International Costs

If your road trip crosses countries, add a category for money-related fees.

Include:

  • ATM fees
  • Currency conversion fees
  • International card fees
  • Exchange rate losses
  • Foreign transaction fees
  • Local taxes
  • Tourist taxes
  • Border fees
  • Vignettes
  • Road permits

This is especially useful for Europe, the UK, New Zealand, North America and any multi-country trip.

Trip Tracka supports worldwide travel planning, so you can keep trip costs organised across different destinations.

Useful page: Travel Planner


18. Recurring Bills

This is one of the most forgotten road trip budget categories.

Just because you are travelling does not mean your normal bills stop.

Include:

  • Mortgage
  • Rent
  • Storage
  • Loans
  • Insurance
  • Subscriptions
  • Phone plans
  • Internet plans
  • School fees
  • Business tools
  • Software
  • Memberships
  • Registration
  • Utilities at home
  • Income and wages

For weekend trips, this may not matter much.

For long-term travel, full-time travel, digital nomad life or a Big Lap, recurring costs are essential.

If you do not include them, your travel budget will look cheaper than your real life costs.

Trip Tracka’s Trip Budget Planner can help you plan recurring costs and income for longer trips.


19. Emergency Buffer

Every road trip needs an emergency buffer.

This is not optional.

Include money for:

  • Breakdowns
  • Tyres
  • Repairs
  • Medical costs
  • Weather delays
  • Road closures
  • Extra accommodation
  • Last-minute bookings
  • Missed ferries
  • Family emergencies
  • Replacement gear
  • Unexpected travel changes

A good starting point is to add at least 10% to 20% of your estimated trip cost as an emergency buffer.

Example:

Planned Trip CostSuggested Emergency Buffer
$2,000$200–$400
$5,000$500–$1,000
$10,000$1,000–$2,000
$25,000$2,500–$5,000

You may not use it.

That is the goal.

But if something goes wrong, you will be glad it is there.


20. Miscellaneous

Every trip needs a miscellaneous category.

But it should not become a dumping ground for everything.

Use it for small costs that do not fit anywhere else.

Examples:

  • Small purchases
  • Souvenirs
  • Replacement items
  • Gifts
  • Donations
  • Tips
  • Local market purchases
  • Unplanned extras

If your miscellaneous category becomes too large, review it.

You may need to create a new category for costs that keep repeating.


Simple Road Trip Budget Template

Use this as a starting point.

Budget CategoryEstimated CostActual Cost
Fuel / Charging$$
Accommodation$$
Campsites$$
Groceries$$
Eating Out$$
Activities$$
Parks & Permits$$
Tolls, Ferries & Parking$$
Vehicle Maintenance$$
Caravan / RV / Campervan Maintenance$$
Gear & Replacements$$
Laundry, Showers & Utilities$$
Phone & Internet$$
Insurance & Roadside$$
Kids & Pets$$
Health & Medical$$
Bank & Currency Fees$$
Recurring Bills$$
Emergency Buffer$$
Miscellaneous$$

Total estimated cost: $
Total actual cost: $
Difference: $

Average cost per day: $
Average cost per night: $
Fuel cost per kilometre or mile: $


Example Road Trip Budget

Here is a simple example for a 14-day road trip.

CategoryBudget
Fuel$650
Accommodation / Campsites$700
Groceries$550
Eating Out$280
Activities$400
Parks & Permits$120
Tolls, Ferries & Parking$150
Vehicle Maintenance Buffer$250
Gear & Replacements$150
Laundry, Showers & Utilities$80
Phone & Internet$60
Insurance / Roadside Allowance$100
Kids / Pets$150
Health & Medical$80
Emergency Buffer$600
Miscellaneous$150

Estimated total: $4,420

Average per day: $315.71

This is why road trips often cost more than people expect.

A trip is not just fuel and a place to sleep.

It is a complete travel lifestyle for however long you are away.


Road Trip Budget Categories by Travel Style

Different travellers need different budget categories.

Here is how to adjust your budget based on the type of trip.


Weekend Road Trip

Focus on:

  • Fuel
  • Accommodation
  • Food
  • Activities
  • Parking
  • Emergency buffer

Best for:

  • Couples
  • Families
  • Short breaks
  • City escapes
  • Coastal drives

Caravan or RV Trip

Focus on:

  • Fuel
  • Caravan parks or RV parks
  • Free and low-cost camps
  • Groceries
  • Maintenance
  • Gas
  • Water
  • Laundry
  • Gear
  • Emergency repairs

Useful page: Caravan Trip Planner


Campervan Trip

Focus on:

  • Fuel
  • Campsites
  • Groceries
  • Eating out
  • Parking
  • Ferries
  • Insurance
  • Gear
  • Laundry
  • Internet

Useful page: Campervan Trip Planner


Family Road Trip

Focus on:

  • Fuel
  • Accommodation
  • Groceries
  • Eating out
  • Kids’ activities
  • Snacks
  • Medical costs
  • Laundry
  • Emergency buffer

Families usually need a bigger food, activity and emergency budget than solo travellers or couples.


Full-Time Travel

Focus on:

  • Weekly living costs
  • Fuel
  • Camps
  • Insurance
  • Maintenance
  • Repairs
  • Income
  • Recurring bills
  • Internet
  • Medical
  • Gear
  • Emergency reserve

Full-time travel needs a real system, not just a holiday budget.


International Road Trip

Focus on:

  • Fuel or charging
  • Accommodation
  • Food
  • Tolls
  • Ferries
  • Parking
  • Insurance
  • Border fees
  • Currency fees
  • SIM cards
  • Travel documents
  • Emergency buffer

Trip Tracka is built for worldwide travel, which makes it useful for road trips across different countries and currencies.


How To Build Your Road Trip Budget in 6 Steps

A good road trip budget does not need to be complicated.

Use this process.


Step 1: Choose Your Trip Type

Start with the kind of trip you are planning.

Examples:

  • Weekend road trip
  • Caravan trip
  • RV trip
  • Campervan trip
  • Camping trip
  • Overseas road trip
  • Full-time travel
  • Family holiday
  • Group trip

Your trip type decides which categories matter most.


Step 2: Estimate Distance and Fuel

Work out your expected distance.

Then estimate fuel using your real-world fuel economy.

Formula:

Distance × Fuel economy ÷ 100 × Fuel price

Example:

2,500 km × 14L/100km ÷ 100 × $2.10 = $735

If you are towing, driving in mountains, using a motorhome or travelling remote roads, add extra.

Then track the real numbers with the Fuel Tracker.


Step 3: Plan Accommodation and Camps

Estimate your nights away.

Then split them by stay type.

Example:

Stay TypeNightsCost
Caravan parks / RV parks5$350
Free camps4$0
Low-cost camps3$75
Hotel reset night1$150

Total: $575

This gives you a more realistic accommodation budget than guessing one average number.


Step 4: Add Daily Living Costs

Work out your daily costs for:

  • Groceries
  • Eating out
  • Coffee
  • Snacks
  • Laundry
  • Showers
  • Internet
  • Kids
  • Pets

Then multiply by the number of days.

Example:

Daily CostAmountDaysTotal
Groceries$6014$840
Eating out$2514$350
Laundry / utilities$814$112

Total: $1,302


Step 5: Add Maintenance, Gear and Emergency Costs

This is where many travellers under-budget.

Add:

  • Vehicle maintenance
  • Caravan or RV maintenance
  • Gear replacements
  • Emergency buffer

Even if you do not use it, having it planned gives you breathing room.

Use Trip Tracka’s Vehicle Maintenance Log and Travel Gear Inventory to keep records organised.


Step 6: Track Actual Costs While You Travel

A budget is only useful if you compare it with reality.

Do not wait until the trip is finished.

Track expenses as they happen.

Use Trip Tracka’s Travel Expense Tracker to log costs by category, trip and vehicle.

That way, you can see if fuel is higher than expected, food is blowing out or accommodation is costing more than planned while there is still time to adjust.


Spreadsheet vs Trip Tracka for Road Trip Budgeting

A spreadsheet is better than guessing.

But it can be annoying to update while travelling.

FeatureSpreadsheetTrip Tracka
Plan budget categoriesYesYes
Track real expensesManualYes
Track fuel costsManual formulasYes
Track cost per kmManual formulasYes
Link expenses to tripsManualYes
Track multiple vehiclesHarderYes
Track maintenanceSeparate sheetYes
Track gear and receiptsSeparate sheetYes
Shared trip expensesDifficultYes
Mobile-friendly on the roadSometimesYes
Works for worldwide travelManual setupYes

Spreadsheets can help you plan.

Trip Tracka helps you plan, track and manage the trip while you are actually on the road.


Why Budget Categories Help You Travel Longer

A road trip budget is not about removing freedom.

It gives you more freedom because you know what is happening.

When your categories are clear, you can make better choices.

You can decide to:

  • Drive less for a few days
  • Use more free camps
  • Cook more meals
  • Reduce takeaway
  • Delay a paid activity
  • Stay longer in a cheaper area
  • Stock up before remote regions
  • Add more emergency money
  • Plan maintenance before it becomes urgent

Guessing creates stress.

Tracking creates control.

And control helps you stay on the road longer.


Final Thoughts: Build the Budget Before the Trip, Track the Real Cost During the Trip

The best road trip budget is not the one with the lowest number.

It is the one that reflects real travel.

Fuel.
Food.
Accommodation.
Activities.
Maintenance.
Gear.
Insurance.
Internet.
Emergencies.
All of it.

When you include the right road trip budget categories, you stop guessing and start travelling with more confidence.

Trip Tracka helps you plan your trip budget, track expenses, log fuel, manage vehicle records, organise gear and keep the whole trip in one place.

If you are planning a road trip, caravan trip, RV adventure, campervan tour, camping holiday, group trip or long-term travel route, start with a proper budget.

Then track the real cost as you go.

Start planning your road trip budget with Trip Tracka


FAQ Section

What are the main road trip budget categories?

The main road trip budget categories are fuel, accommodation, campsites, groceries, eating out, activities, park fees, tolls, parking, vehicle maintenance, gear, insurance, phone and internet, emergency costs and miscellaneous expenses.

How do I make a road trip budget?

Start by estimating your distance, fuel cost, number of nights, accommodation style, food costs, activities, maintenance and emergency buffer. Then track your actual spending during the trip so you can compare planned vs real costs.

What is the biggest road trip expense?

Fuel and accommodation are usually the biggest road trip expenses, especially for long-distance travel, caravan trips, RV travel and motorhome travel. Food, activities and repairs can also become major costs if they are not tracked.

How much emergency money should I include in a road trip budget?

A good starting point is to add 10% to 20% of your estimated trip cost as an emergency buffer. Longer trips, remote travel and caravan or RV trips should usually have a larger buffer.

Should I track groceries and eating out separately?

Yes. Groceries and eating out should be separate categories because they behave differently. Groceries are part of daily living, while cafes, takeaway and restaurants can quickly increase the total trip cost.

Is a spreadsheet enough for road trip budgeting?

A spreadsheet can help you plan, but it can be harder to update while travelling. Trip Tracka is built for road trips and lets you plan budgets, track expenses, log fuel, manage vehicle records and organise trip costs in one place.

Can I use Trip Tracka for caravan, RV or campervan budgets?

Yes. Trip Tracka works for road trips, caravan travel, RV travel, campervan trips, camping, backpacking, group trips and long-term travel worldwide.

Can Trip Tracka track fuel costs?

Yes. Trip Tracka includes a fuel tracker so you can log fill-ups, fuel prices, odometer readings and vehicle details to see fuel economy and cost per kilometre or mile.

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