Key Takeaways
- A few days after a trip ends, Jettova emails a one-tap 'How was it?' rating request.
- Rate 1–5 stars plus an optional one-line note — no long survey.
- Publishing a rated trip turns it into a real-traveler recommendation on the Discover feed.
- Your rating + note become the published trip's headline — the human signal generic content lacks.
- Rate in the moment too: the star widget is on the trip detail after the end date, across web, iOS, and Android.
Most apps go quiet the second your trip ends. Jettova does the opposite: a few days after you're home — long enough to have perspective, soon enough to still remember the details — it sends you one short email titled "How was [your city]?" That's the post-trip review, and it's deliberately tiny.
The ask is a single tap to rate the trip one to five stars, plus an optional one-line note about what made it worth doing. There's no survey, no form, no twelve-question NPS gauntlet. Open the trip, tap the stars, and you're done. The rating saves to that trip and shows up whenever you look back at it.
The reason the review is worth your fifteen seconds is what it unlocks for everyone else. Jettova's whole premise is that the best travel advice comes from people who actually went — not from a marketing page. When you rate a trip and add a note, you can choose to publish it, and it becomes a real itinerary on Jettova's Discover feed: a genuine, been-there recommendation that the next person planning that destination can see, clone, and adapt to their own dates.
That published trip carries your rating and your one-line note as its headline, which is exactly the human signal that's missing from most travel content. "Five stars — go in shoulder season and book the rooftop early" from someone who was there last month is worth more than a thousand generic listicles, and it's what makes the Discover feed useful instead of noise.
The timing is handled for you. A daily process looks for trips that wrapped up in the last several days and haven't been rated yet, emails their owner once, and never pesters you again about the same trip. If you'd rather rate it in the moment, the star widget is right there on the trip's detail screen once the end date passes — on the web, the iPhone app, or Android.
Reviewing a trip is optional and so is publishing it. But together they're the quiet engine behind Jettova's most honest feature: a library of trips that real people took and rated, instead of trips a brand wants to sell you.
Related guides
Frequently Asked Questions
When does Jettova ask me to review my trip?
Does my rating get shared publicly?
What's the point of leaving a note?
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