We think travel
should repair
itself.
ViaMe builds the closed loop that watches a journey, predicts the break, and books the alternative before the traveller has to think about it. We're a small engineering team based in Unterwössen in the Bavarian Chiemgau, focused on one unglamorous, high-stakes problem: the narrow window between "something is about to go wrong" and "it's too late to fix."
By the time most systems tell you a flight is delayed, the good alternatives are already gone — bought by the few hundred other people on the same plane, or by the airline's own rebooking queue. The value isn't in detecting disruption. It's in acting inside the window where action still changes the outcome.
So we built ViaMe backwards from that window: prediction early enough to matter, routing fast enough to keep up, booking atomic enough to trust, and a device quiet enough to still have battery when the moment arrives.
Four principles
the product keeps.
Act, don't alert
An alert without a booked answer is just anxiety. We only interrupt a traveller once we hold a complete alternative.
All-or-nothing
A reroute that books three of four legs is worse than none. Every rebooking is transactional, with explicit rollback.
Respect the device
Intelligence that flattens your battery before the disruption hits has failed. The edge model earns its power budget.
Underneath, not on top
We're a service beneath the tools travellers already use — not one more dashboard to learn and babysit.
One system,
not a feature.
ViaMe is a protected, integrated approach — prediction, multimodal routing, Saga-based booking orchestration and an adaptive on-device governor working as a single loop. Each part is interesting alone; together they close the gap between knowing and doing.
We're currently in closed pilot with corporate-travel operators in DACH and the UK, with EU data residency from day one.
Building inside
the same window?
Whether you run a travel programme or just find the problem as interesting as we do — we'd like to hear from you.