A speculative redesign of YouTripoutbound , a multi-currency wallet app, focused on improving usability, discoverability and engagement.
I identified key usability gaps in the YouTrip experience, benchmarked against its competitors, and introduced new features like a real-time exchange rate table, perk search and onboarding overlays to encourage app usage beyond travel. Testing revealed improved task success and satisfaction.
Personal project
UX audit, Research, UI design
2022
I am not affiliated with YouTrip and this redesign was done completely of my own volition, mostly to expand my proficiency with Figma and remote usability tools such as Maze.
Youtrip had not updated it’s wallet experience since 2018. When COVID-19 curtailed travel, YouTrip introduced newer features like Perks (partner discounts) and regular blog and Telegram updates to drive engagement.
However, as a user, I found:
Despite new initiatives, the app felt stagnant, especially compared to its competitors.
My personal experience with YouTrip during recent travel experiences also pointed to clunky usability and inconvenience. I decided to explore how to make the app more useful, both during and outside travel periods.
First, I analysed online reviews shared by customers on review boards and forums on their YouTrip experience.

Select review snippets taken from the iOS App Store, Google Play Store and Seedly review forums

Summary of common feedback observed
Certain common feedback, such as those pertaining to payment security and customer support, goes beyond the scope of interface design. Feedback comparing YouTrip to “better” options available in the market led me to perform a competitive analysis to see how YouTrip stands in the increasingly saturated market.
Compared to its competitors, YouTrip offers considerably fewer features. It was clear that YouTrip’s primary differentiator was being the “free and simple” option in the market for travel payments. Hence, this became my key guiding principle in my redesign approach.

YouTrip's main selling point was being the "free & simple" option in the market for travel payments.

YouTrip's main selling point was being the "free & simple" option in the market for travel payments.
To identify key friction and pain points with the existing travel payment experience, I evaluated the existing interface and assessed the app’s architecture, revealing –
To validate these issues, I conducted an online survey with 16 YouTrip users.


Survey conducted using TypeForm.
I summarised my findings into a persona and journey map to identify key opportunity areas to improve YouTrip as an effective go-to travel payment mode.

User persona

User journey map detailing key usability barriers and friction points in the existing payment experience
With my gathered insights, I framed this re-design project in the form of a problem statement and identified the key opportunity areas.
How might we transform YouTrip from a travel-only utility into an engaging financial tool that delivers value both in and outside travel, while preserving its market position as the simple, fee-free option for travellers?
I listed down key feature additions/enhancements that would improve the current gaps in the travel payment experience:
Bonus features that will also boost the overall YouTrip experience based on key insights gathered, but are further down the prioritisation list:
With the above concepts in mind, I recreated the app's site map to serve as a base for my redesign, before proceeding with my initial sketches and digital wireframing.

Re-vamped site map

Initial sketches on pen and paper and digital wireframing on Figma
I conducted unmoderated remote usability tests with five YouTrip users to test my preliminary solutions.

Participants were encouraged to enable permissions to record as they work through their tasks.

Users typically did not discover the newly introduced 'Marketplace' tab and instead reverted to the app's existing entry points of accessing exchange rates.

Participants also tended to skip ahead of reading “How to” when redeeming their perks.
Based on testing insights, I implemented several key refinements:
The final design synthesises all research insights and testing feedback into a renewed experience that addresses the key problem statement while maintaining YouTrip's brand identity.
A comprehensive dashboard that:
This feature directly addresses the initial disruptive travel payment experience, where users had the behaviour of leaving the app to check rates elsewhere.
An in-app calculator that:
This addresses the initial friction and inconvenience in decision-making around foreign currency usage during travel
A reimagined perks experience featuring
This transforms Perks from an afterthought to a core element of their value proposition, driving engagement during non-travel periods.
Feel free to click around the prototype below, which also features bonus functions such as auto wallet top-up, integrated marketing content access and customer service support chats:
It was my first time conducting a usability test in an unmoderated, remote environment. Even when using an established tool like Maze, setting clear instructions for participants is essential to yield meaningful test outcomes.
Survey size was small (<20 users) and skewed towards tech-savvy adults.
YouTrip is a mobile app; Maze is desktop-first, which created disconnects from the expected experience.
Beyond UI/UX, a dive into online user reviews during the research phase revealed deeper trust and security concerns in the platform that will require backend and service-level enhancements to address. These point to potential strategic directions for YouTrip's product roadmap that are beyond the scope of this re-design.
Other Works
©️ 2025 Tessa Goh