Passport
Check your passport validity, condition, blank pages if relevant and that the name matches bookings and travel documents.
Use this last-minute checklist to reduce avoidable friction before departure: documents, money, phone access, arrival transport, safety basics and the practical first steps you should not leave to guesswork.
Checklist-first, not a packing list. Verify entry, legal, medical and time-sensitive requirements with official sources.
Choose the practical next step for arrival, transport, money, documents, safety or first-day decisions.
This section points to what to check, not country-specific legal certainty. Confirm current requirements with official sources, your airline, accommodation, employer, host or travel provider.
Check your passport validity, condition, blank pages if relevant and that the name matches bookings and travel documents.
Verify entry, transit, visa, registration or arrival-form requirements with official sources before departure.
Confirm travel insurance access, emergency contact details, policy documents and how to reach support from abroad.
Save accommodation, return or onward travel, meeting details and host contacts offline in case mobile data fails.
If traveling with children, check any consent, custody, birth certificate, school or airline documentation requirements that may apply.
Keep secure digital copies and one offline backup of critical details without exposing sensitive information unnecessarily.
The goal is not to predict every payment situation. It is to avoid arriving with no working fallback for transport, food, check-in or a first emergency.
Decide whether you need a small arrival cash buffer before you fully understand local payment habits.
Carry at least one backup card where possible and confirm travel notifications, limits, PINs and contactless assumptions.
Know whether your plan depends on airport ATMs, bank ATMs, withdrawal limits, fees or a card that might be blocked.
Ask the GPT for cautious local expectations so you do not overpay, underpay or create awkward first interactions.
Plan how you will pay for the first transfer, first meal, phone setup and a backup option if one payment method fails.
Check whether your existing plan works, what it costs and whether it is enough for maps, messages and emergency calls.
If using an eSIM, install and test what you can before travel, while keeping activation instructions accessible offline.
If buying locally, know whether you need passport details, airport pickup, store hours or another connection until setup works.
Download maps, accommodation details, first address, airport route and important contacts before you leave.
Your arrival plan should survive fatigue, low battery, weak internet, closed desks, luggage delays and a changed arrival time.
Keep documents, accommodation details and onward information easy to access while allowing time for border, baggage and customs steps.
Choose your first transport option before departure: public transport, taxi, ride app, hotel transfer or another verified route.
If arriving late, simplify the route, confirm check-in, keep payment backups ready and avoid plans that require too many decisions.
Save your accommodation address, local-language version if available, phone number and route screenshots offline.
Ask for practical risk checks based on your arrival time, transport choice, luggage, travel purpose, children, mobility needs and comfort level.
Ask what common visitor traps or pressure situations to watch for around arrival points, payments and transport.
Avoid unclear pickup points, unverified offers, poorly understood night routes or plans that depend on a phone you cannot use yet.
Ask about basic etiquette, public behavior, sensitive topics, tipping norms, queues, photos and first-day social mistakes.
Use it to check the final practical gaps before departure: documents, money, phone, transport, arrival, safety and official items to verify.