Free Printable Sightseeing Wishlist — Must-See Trip Planner PDF
Priority, time estimates, transport, and ticket notes — separate must-see from nice-to-have before you overbook.
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Must-see versus nice-to-have is a scheduling problem
Every destination has three times as many interesting things as you have hours. Tagging Priority (must / nice / if raining) keeps the group aligned when someone suggests “one more museum” on a day already full of walking.
Est. time should include queues, photos, and the walk from transit — not just the average visit length from a blog. Underestimating here is why people miss dinner reservations.
Tickets / hours is where you note timed entry, last admission, or a city pass — the details that don’t fit in a pretty map screenshot.
Practical setup tips
Before printing the Sightseeing Wishlist, decide what one row represents and how often the page will be reviewed. That keeps the sheet from becoming a catch-all notes page and makes the finished record easier to compare with similar pages in the same binder or workflow.
- Place / activity should be filled in consistently so the sheet remains useful after the first day of use.
- Priority should be filled in consistently so the sheet remains useful after the first day of use.
- Est. time should be filled in consistently so the sheet remains useful after the first day of use.
- Getting there should be filled in consistently so the sheet remains useful after the first day of use.
- Tickets / hours should be filled in consistently so the sheet remains useful after the first day of use.
- Notes should be filled in consistently so the sheet remains useful after the first day of use.
If the printable is part of a formal, financial, medical, legal, or compliance workflow, use it as a planning and note-taking aid alongside the official system or professional guidance that applies to your situation.