Travel Time
Travel time in calendar scheduling is the time allocated between meetings to account for physical travel between locations, ensuring that commitments requiring in-person attendance are scheduled with realistic transition time.
Understanding Travel Time
Calendar applications often schedule meetings without considering that consecutive in-person commitments in different locations are physically impossible. A 2 PM meeting across town and a 3 PM meeting in the office require at least the travel time between them as a buffer. Smart calendar management accounts for meeting locations, estimates travel time based on distance and transportation mode, and prevents scheduling conflicts that exist on paper but not in reality. As hybrid work has expanded in-person meeting requirements, location-aware scheduling has become increasingly important.
How GAIA Uses Travel Time
GAIA can account for travel time in scheduling by analyzing meeting locations from calendar event details and applying appropriate buffers for in-person commitments. When scheduling a new meeting near an existing in-person commitment, GAIA checks whether sufficient travel time exists and flags potential conflicts.
Related Concepts
Buffer Time
Buffer time is intentionally scheduled empty space between calendar events, providing time for meeting preparation, task completion, mental transition, and recovery before the next commitment.
AI Calendar Management
AI calendar management is the use of artificial intelligence to schedule, organize, and optimize your calendar by finding ideal meeting times, protecting focus blocks, preparing meeting briefs, and coordinating events with your tasks and communications.
Availability Window
An availability window is a defined period during which someone is open to scheduling meetings or calls, based on their calendar, preferences, and work patterns, used to determine valid meeting times without exposing full calendar details.
Calendar Automation
Calendar automation uses AI to intelligently manage your schedule by finding optimal meeting times, preparing briefings, blocking focus time, and coordinating calendar events with your tasks and communications.


