Modes of transport experiment tracker

How the experiment works

This tracker is designed as a light, realistic behaviour experiment. You track what you actually do, then review patterns at the end.

  1. Pick a timeframe: 7 / 14 / 30 days.
  2. Define your “rules”: e.g., “bus first”, “bike if > 3°C and dry”, “no rideshare weekdays”.
  3. Log trips: mode, distance/time, cost, and a quick mood/energy note.
  4. Review weekly: what changed, what didn’t, what surprised you.
  5. Decide one upgrade: a small habit or infrastructure change to keep.

Tip: If you want CO₂ estimates too, pair this with the CO₂ + expense counter.

What you’ll track

Basics

  • Date
  • Trip purpose
  • Transport mode
  • Distance or time
  • Cost

Human signals

  • Mood (1–5)
  • Energy (1–5)
  • Stress (1–5)
  • Weather/context
  • Notes (friction + wins)

Keep it simple: if a field is annoying, delete it. The best tracker is the one you actually use.
Disclaimer: this is only a template. For the best results edit the sheet or contact us for quotation if you are running a wider project and would like an integration into your organisation/personal project.

End-of-week reflection prompts

  • What triggered the “least sustainable” choice this week?
  • Which mode made you feel surprisingly good (or bad)?
  • What was the biggest time sink?
  • Where did money leak out?
  • What single change would make the sustainable choice easier next week?

Optional: Add your own experiment notes

Want this page to include your personal learnings? Add a short section like:

  • My baseline: what you did before
  • My rules: what you tried to change
  • Biggest surprise: one insight
  • What I kept: one habit that stuck

Quick start

  1. Download the template
  2. Pick a start date
  3. Track for 7 days first
  4. Decide: continue to 30 days or stop

FAQ

Do I need exact distance data?

No.

Estimates are enough. The tracker is designed to raise awareness, not produce laboratory-grade data.
If you roughly know the distance between home, work, or university, that is sufficient.

Consistency matters more than precision.

What if I forget to log trips?

Log them later.

If you miss a day, approximate it based on your routine.
The goal is pattern recognition over time, not perfection.

Even incomplete data reveals behavioural trends.

Can I use it as a team challenge?

Yes.

The tracker works well for classrooms, companies, or small teams.
Participants can compare transport modes, CO₂ impact, and cost differences over a month.

It can be used to start discussions about infrastructure, habits, and collective impact.

More tools

Want to turn your tracking into numbers?