T
Tripozi

Dietary travel

Travel guides for specific diets.

Every AI travel planner lists “vegan-friendly” without verifying; every travel blog missed the celiac traveler who got sick from a shared fryer. We cross-reference OpenStreetMap contributor data (real humans verifying venues on the ground) with honest dish-by-dish compatibility for the local cuisine. If a city has no supervised kosher restaurant, we say so.

edited by the Tripozi editorial team · data: OpenStreetMap contributors, Wikipedia, community check-ins

How we verify

OSM diet tagging. OpenStreetMap contributors tag restaurants with diet:halal=yes, diet:vegan=yes, diet:kosher=yes, and diet:gluten_free=yes. These tags are applied by humans on the ground — our venue lists are not AI-generated, not scraped from unreliable aggregators, not hallucinated.

Honest density ratings. Some cities are strong for one diet and thin for another. Berlin has hundreds of vegan venues; Tallinn has a handful. We say so instead of filling pages with generic “diet-friendly” fluff.

Local dish compatibility. We list the traditional dishes of each city and flag them always, usually, or ask — so you know at a glance whether you need to negotiate with a restaurant or can just order.

Community check-ins. Like every Tripozi vertical, dietary guides accept first-hand reports from travelers with the relevant dietary needs. Month visited + specific venue + what was available → published with first name attribution.