Create the Activity
Start a business trip, local mileage route, inspection visit, property appointment, client meeting, or content assignment.
How Divine Voyage Works
Divine Voyage connects trip planning, mileage, business purpose, receipts, activities, review alerts, and reporting so your records remain understandable long after the travel or drive is over.
The Workflow
Use one connected record instead of reconstructing business purpose and expenses from calendars, maps, bank statements, photos, and memory months later.
Start a business trip, local mileage route, inspection visit, property appointment, client meeting, or content assignment.
Add travel dates, destinations, routes, mileage, business locations, parking, tolls, and related stops.
Connect the activity to clients, properties, brand work, meetings, deliverables, research, inspections, or other business objectives.
Upload receipts, itineraries, confirmations, photos, notes, content schedules, inspection details, and other supporting records.
Review business, commuting, and personal activity; mixed-use dates; missing details; and items requiring professional judgment.
Prepare summaries by tax year, date, trip, vehicle, category, property, client, or business purpose for review and filing support.
Two Types of Movement
A travel creator may need to document flights, hotels, business days, content tasks, and personal days. A real estate agent or property inspector may need to document dozens of local routes. Divine Voyage is designed to support both patterns without treating them as identical.
Built-In Review Discipline
A mileage total or receipt image is more useful when it remains connected to the date, destination, business purpose, people, properties, tasks, and supporting activity.
Flag missing purposes, dates, destinations, route details, receipts, or classifications before reports are generated.
Document personal days, personal mileage, commuting, and shared expenses instead of presenting every activity as fully business-related.
Group records by the relevant year without hard-coding a mileage rate that may change from one year to the next.
Share organized records with an authorized bookkeeper, accountant, or tax professional for independent review.