ChatGPT Planned My Scotland Trip: What Worked and What Failed
Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.
Creator's Key Takeaways
I asked chat GPT to send me someplace warm although to be fair I did say I prefer to go some Place warm
chat GPT has brought us to The Moxy so so far so good
the AI did give in the tips to not miss the fistle chapel which is tucked away in the back corner which is definitely one of the neatest parts of the church
chat GPT recommended it to us would we recommend it to you probably not
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Scale: 0–5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = “meh”, 5 = “bacon bliss”. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.
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Blog post: https://www.nowgoseeit.com/blog/3-day-edinburgh-itinerary Can ChatGPT plan a real Edinburgh trip that you’d actually follow? In this video I let AI design a five-day Edinburgh itinerary—flights, hotel, attractions, and food—then I run it in the real world to see what works, what fails, and what it costs. If you’re comparing Edinburgh itineraries or wondering whether AI can plan travel, you’ll see honest results on airport transport, Edinburgh Castle, Palace of Holyroodhouse, Calton Hill, galleries, markets, and more in winter conditions. The setup and rules I asked ChatGPT for a five-day trip starting January 22 with these constraints: solo-traveler friendly, no advance visa paperwork beyond standard entry, reachable from Los Angeles, daily budget target \$100–\$200 for lodging, food, transport, and activities. Preferences: active city days, UNESCO sites, culture-forward stops, and a packed schedule. No beaches, wine country, or intentionally cold destinations. The AI chose Edinburgh, Scotland. Arrival and logistics Airport to city: ChatGPT suggested a taxi for roughly £25 and about 25 minutes. That matched real-world timing and price. Hotel: Moxy Edinburgh Fountainbridge for a central, budget-minded base; good for walking and simple transport connections. Entry requirements shifted recently—always check official guidance before you fly. Day 1 highlights (AI plan vs. reality) Breakfast at Loudons Fountainbridge. Solid and filling; AI’s price estimate ran a bit low. Edinburgh Castle. Self-guided with Crown Jewels. AI missed that the Stone of Destiny had moved, so don’t count on every historical detail being perfect. Lunch at Oink (Victoria Street). We skipped it because breakfast held us over, but cost estimates were accurate. Royal Mile and St Giles’ Cathedral. Shorter than AI predicted for us; the Thistle Chapel callout was useful. The Real Mary King’s Close. Pre-booking was essential; the AI reminder helped. Dinner at Howie’s on Victoria Street. Traditional dishes were fine, but AI underestimated menu pricing. Storm day curveball A major wind event shut down public transport and attractions. The AI’s “make the best of it” revision suggested staying in, reading, light lobby activities, and simple food options. Not glamorous, but realistic given the closures. The big takeaway: AI can’t forecast last-minute severe weather—build a buffer day or a wet-weather plan if you’re traveling in winter. Makeup day sprint Palace of Holyroodhouse. AI said 9:00 a.m.; it opened at 10:00 a.m. when we went. Double-check current hours. Calton Hill. Great views and quick to fit between stops; this recommendation landed. The Booking Office (Wetherspoons) for lunch. Inexpensive, predictable pub basics; aligned with the budget target. Scottish National Gallery. One of the AI’s “must-see” pieces wasn’t on display anymore. The stop was still worthwhile and warm on a cold day. Tron Kirk Market. Smaller than expected; we wrapped it quickly. Mr. Wood’s Fossils. A win—specific, unusual, and memorable. Armchair Books. Oversold in the plan; quick browse was enough. Final dinner reality check The Devil’s Advocate looked promising on paper—historic setting and whisky focus—but dinner underdelivered and service was slow. If you’re choosing one splurge meal, this wouldn’t be my pick based on this visit. What the AI got right Clear backbone for a first-time Edinburgh trip: airport transfer, central hotel, anchor attractions, and several pre-book reminders. Itinerary density was good for a city built for short, punchy stops. What the AI got wrong Weather risk in January, outdated or imprecise attraction details, and optimistic price/time estimates for some meals and sights. The plan benefits from a human sanity check before you lock it in. Who this video helps Travelers deciding between Edinburgh itineraries and anyone curious whether AI can plan an international trip. You’ll see specific transport choices, opening-hour gotchas, realistic timing, and where human judgment improves an AI-generated plan. If you found this useful Tell me in the comments if you’d let AI plan your next trip—and where. Like and subscribe for more destination guides, cruise-port walk-throughs, and practical travel experiments. New videos are designed to be actionable: transport steps, timing, and accurate cost ranges you can actually use. Connect with me Instagram: https://instagram.com/nowgoseeit X (Twitter): https://x.com/nowgoseeit Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/nowgoseeit Facebook: https://facebook.com/nowgoseeit