Achu.app
Summary
You're standing in front of a dish you can't name, a plant you've never seen, or a sign you can't read — and your options are to guess, Google blindly, or ask a stranger. Spotter is the app built for that exact gap.
Point the camera, snap, and Spotter returns an AI-generated identification with context — historical background for landmarks, species info for wildlife, translation logic for foreign signs. Each snap is saved as a Spot, so your identifications accumulate into a searchable travel journal rather than disappearing into your camera roll. Follow-up questions are answered through a per-Spot chat, so you can ask where to eat near the Eiffel Tower without opening a second app. The free tier caps at three identifications per day, which is enough for a casual afternoon but runs out fast on a full day of exploring. Beyond that ceiling, premium is the only path forward.
Bottom line: Spotter earns its place on a cultural trip where you want context on a handful of things each day — it breaks down the moment you're moving fast through a market and hitting the daily cap before noon.
Pricing Plans
Subscription- Price
- $6.99/month or $39.99/year
- Free Tier
- 3 photo identifications per day, 5 chat messages per spot
Free
Basic access with usage limits
- 3 photo identifications per day
- 5 chat messages per spot
- Full spot history with photos and locations
- No account required to start
Spotter Premium
Unlimited access with advanced features
- Unlimited photo identifications
- 25 chat messages per spot
- Choose your AI model (Gemini or GPT)
- Create custom synopsis modes
View full pricing on achu.app →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- One-tap identification across a wide range of subject types — landmarks, food, wildlife, signs — so you don't carry four separate apps for four separate problems.
- Per-Spot follow-up chat lets you ask contextual questions immediately after identification, which means you get dining recommendations or visiting logistics without switching to a second tool mid-street.
- Every identification saves automatically as a Spot, building a searchable journal of the trip — so you can reconstruct what you saw and learned without manually logging anything.
- Covers foreign-language signs as an identification target, which means a menu or street sign in an unfamiliar script is handled by the same workflow you use for landmarks and food.
Cons
Sign in to edit- The free tier allows three identifications per day. On a full day of market exploration, temple-hopping, or a dense hiking trail, that cap is gone before midday — and the only resolution is upgrading to the paid subscription.
- No API access and no self-hosted option exist. Travel app developers, tour operators, or naturalist platforms that want to embed this identification capability into their own product cannot do so — they will need to evaluate a dedicated vision API provider instead.
- Identification quality on ambiguous subjects — unlabeled regional dishes, obscure local plants, damaged or partially visible signs — is not independently benchmarked anywhere on the product page. Teams with accuracy requirements for safety-sensitive subjects like edible versus toxic plants should treat the output as a starting point and verify independently.
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About
- Platforms
- iOS, Android
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-08T04:23:31.330Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Solo travelers seeking context and recommendations
- Cultural tourists wanting historical background
- Outdoor enthusiasts identifying plants and wildlife
- Adventurous eaters exploring local cuisine
- Travelers creating documented travel journals
What it does well
- Identifying landmarks and monuments while traveling
- Discovering what street food or dishes are before ordering
- Learning about wildlife and plants on hiking trails
- Decoding signs and menus in foreign languages
- Building a searchable record of travel experiences
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Achu.app free?
- Achu.app is a paid tool ($6.99/month or $39.99/year). No permanent free tier is offered.
- Is Achu.app open source?
- No — Achu.app is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- When was Achu.app released?
- Achu.app was first released in 2024.
- What platforms does Achu.app support?
- Achu.app is available on: iOS, Android.
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Curated lists that include this category
Travel throws identification problems at you constantly: the monument you can’t name, the street food you’re afraid to order, the trailside plant you want to know isn’t poisonous. Spotter addresses all of these through a single workflow — snap a photo, receive an AI-generated synopsis, then ask follow-up questions in a chat interface anchored to that specific photo. The three-step loop is point, identify, dig deeper, and the vendor describes it as instant. Every identification is stored as a Spot, building a personal travel journal you can revisit after the trip.
The differentiating feature is the per-Spot chat. Most identification apps return a result and stop. Spotter lets you interrogate the result — ask about visiting hours, nearby restaurants, whether the summit requires an elevator or allows stairs. The demo on the product page shows a conversation about the Eiffel Tower that surfaces Michelin-starred dining, queue-skipping advice, and stair climb logistics. That contextual depth is what separates this from a reverse image search.
Spotter fits best in the hands of a solo traveler who encounters a few significant things per day and wants to understand them properly. It fits less well for high-volume use cases: street photographers cataloguing dozens of subjects, naturalists logging a full day of species on a trail, or any traveler who burns through three identifications before lunch. The free tier’s daily cap is a hard wall, not a soft suggestion. Teams or guides looking to build identification workflows into a product will also find no API access and no self-hosted option — this is a consumer mobile app, not a platform.
