AI travel suggestions often contain subtle factual errors—wrong opening hours, defunct restaurants, misplaced landmarks—that feel convincing because they're embedded in otherwise sensible advice; the only reliable defense is spot-checking anything critical before you commit money or time. A good rule: use AI for frameworks and inspiration, verify the details yourself.
Hallucination is when AI confidently describes something that doesn't exist. It's not lying—AI isn't intentionally deceiving you. It's pattern-matching based on training data, and sometimes those patterns create false information that sounds completely plausible.
For travel planning, this is a real problem. An AI might describe a specific restaurant in Athens with an exact address, cuisine style, and price range—and none of it exists. It might recommend a boutique hotel in Kyoto that sounds perfect based on the description, but when you search for the name, it's nowhere. This happens because the AI learned patterns about how restaurants and hotels are described, then assembled those patterns into something that sounds real but isn't.
AI learns from text on the internet. When trained on travel blogs, hotel reviews, and restaurant descriptions, it learns the patterns of how real places are described. It learns that Rome has "centuries-old cobblestone streets" and "family-run trattorias" and "Renaissance fountains." Sometimes it can blend these patterns into descriptions of places that don't exist but sound exactly like they could.
Different AI tools have different hallucination rates. Claude tends to hallucinate less than some alternatives because it's more likely to say "I'm not certain about this." ChatGPT will give you detailed recommendations that sound confident but might not be real. Perplexity is better because it cites sources—if it hallucinates, you can see it cited something that doesn't exist.
Never book a restaurant or hotel based solely on an AI recommendation without verification. Always search for it independently: Google Maps, TripAdvisor, the hotel's official website, or locals on Reddit. A hallucinated recommendation will disappear when you search—no Google Maps pin, no reviews, nothing.
Ask the AI to cite sources: "Where did you get this recommendation?" If it can't point to a blog, article, or source, it might be hallucinated. Better AI tools will tell you upfront if they're uncertain or if they're synthesizing information rather than pulling from verified sources.
Use AI for ideation and direction, not final verification. "What neighborhoods should I explore for street food?" is safe. "Tell me the exact name of a specific restaurant" is risky without verification.
AI is excellent for brainstorming trip ideas, understanding neighborhoods, and getting recommendations for types of experiences. It's weak for specific business names and details. Use it to identify what you want ("I want local coffee culture experiences in the Marais"), then verify specific spots yourself through reviews and maps.
Try this: Ask ChatGPT to recommend a specific, lesser-known restaurant in your nearest major city—somewhere that seems plausible but that you're not familiar with. Write down the name, address, and description. Then search for it on Google Maps and Yelp. If it doesn't appear, you've found a hallucination. Try this a few times and you'll develop intuition for when AI descriptions sound plausible but unverified.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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