Skip to content

QR-powered real-world adventures

Turn found objects into shared journeys.

GoTrackable helps you create a Geotrackable item, give it a mission, attach a durable public code, release it into the world, and watch every finder add the next chapter.

Illustrated GoTrackable map showing a QR trackable journey across multiple stops

What GoTrackable is for

A story page for anything that should travel.

Trackable items are not just souvenirs. They are physical objects with a code, a goal, and a public history. GoTrackable turns that idea into a simple website flow for geocachers, families, schools, clubs, troops, event hosts, and anyone who wants a real-world object to collect memories as it moves.

Create the page

Name the item, write its goal, choose a category, and add an opening note or photo while it is still with you.

Attach the code

Put the public code or QR on a durable tag so future finders can read it clearly in the field.

Release it

Place it in a cache, event handoff, classroom exchange, or other allowed location and log the starting point.

Watch it move

Finders scan, log, add notes, and move the item along so its map and story keep growing.

Built around the adventure loop

Scan, read the mission, log the find, move it forward.

Every page should answer three questions fast: What is this object? What does its owner hope it will do? What should the finder do next? The theme is written to make those steps obvious for newcomers while still giving experienced geocachers enough depth for etiquette, missions, ownership, and long-term tracking.

  • Search-indexable pages with real text, headings, and internal links.
  • Use-case pages for families, clubs, schools, troops, events, and solo cachers.
  • FAQ and safety pages that explain public codes, private codes, and responsible release notes.
Illustrated QR tag attached to a geocache object

Designed for field clarity

The public tag can be simple: scan me, log me, and help me travel. The deeper story lives on the GoTrackable page.

Important code guidance

Public tags should be public. Secret codes should stay private.

The public code can live on the physical tag because finders need it in the field. Secret codes, private QR links, and owner-only controls should stay out of public cache descriptions, public photos, and comment threads.

Read the safety guide