World Travel Map
The world is impossibly vast and varied — 195 countries spread across seven continents, from Arctic tundra to tropical coastline, ancient capitals to remote islands. This interactive World Travel Map lets you turn a lifetime of journeys into a single visual record, tracking everywhere you've been around the globe. Whether you've backpacked across Southeast Asia, road-tripped the American West, wandered the capitals of Europe, trekked through South America, or gone on safari across East Africa, this world map helps you mark every place you've been — and every place still on your wishlist. Click any country to label it as Visited, Lived, or Wishlist, search instantly to jump to any nation, and watch your progress — and the percentage of the world you've explored — update in real time. When you're finished, download your personalised world map as a high-resolution SVG — perfect for printing, framing, or turning your travels into a lasting keepsake.
World Travel Map
Create your own world travel map. Select a category, then click countries to mark where you’ve been, lived, or want to explore.
ANTIPODE FAQ
What hemisphere am I in right now?
Your hemisphere depends on your latitude and longitude. Locations north of the Equator are in the Northern Hemisphere, while those south are in the Southern Hemisphere. East and West are determined by longitude relative to the Prime Meridian. This tool can detect your current location instantly.
Can a place be in both the Eastern and Western Hemispheres?
Yes. Locations that sit directly on the Prime Meridian (0° longitude) lie on the boundary between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres. Most places fall clearly into one or the other, but boundary locations technically touch both.
Is the Equator the only line that defines hemispheres?
The Equator defines the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. The Eastern and Western Hemispheres are defined by the Prime Meridian and the 180° meridian on the opposite side of Earth.
Are hemispheres the same as continents?
No. Hemispheres are based on global reference lines, not landmasses. A single continent can span multiple hemispheres — for example, Africa crosses both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, as well as the Eastern and Western Hemispheres.
Why do some countries exist in more than one hemisphere?
Large countries or those near the Equator or Prime Meridian may extend across hemisphere boundaries. As a result, different parts of the same country can belong to different hemispheres.