This product was not featured by Product Hunt yet. It will not be visible on their landing page and won't be ranked (cannot win product of the day regardless of upvotes).
Trails can get busy, and others stay empty, but how do you know? We built Trailsense to answer that. Our solar-powered nodes count hikers using anonymized wifi probe requests, the pings a phone sends while scanning for known networks. A dashboard turns those counts into a clear view of how busy each trail is over time. No cameras, no app for hikers to install, and no personal data ever leaving the device.
Hey, I'm Francesco, one of three people behind Trailsense, along with Felix and Lea.
We build small solar-powered sensor nodes that count how many people pass by on a hiking trail, without cameras and without hikers having to install anything. The nodes listen for wifi probe requests, the background pings a phone sends out while scanning for known networks, and turn them into an aggregated count. No raw probe request data ever leaves the node, and no personal data is stored anywhere in the system.
The idea started at the Tourism Technology Hackathon in 2025, where Tirol Werbung brought us a real problem: they know exactly how many people sleep in which hotel each night, but almost nothing about where those people go during the day. We kept working on it as our master's project, and this year we ran a pilot on the Nordkette in Innsbruck alongside Tirol Werbung.
Right now Trailsense is pre-commercial. The pilot is done, we're refining the dashboard and the node hardware, and we don't have a public demo up yet since it's still a bit rough around the edges. Longer term we want to add a public-facing side too, something like Google Maps traffic data but for hiking trails, so hikers can check how busy a trail is before heading out. For now our focus is the municipality and tourism board side.
We're posting here mainly to get feedback, whether you've built sensor hardware yourself or you're just someone who hikes and has opinions about being tracked outdoors. What would make you trust a system like this to collect data around you? And if you were a hiker using a public facing traffic-map version someday, what would you actually want to see on it?
Our node firmware is open source on GitHub (github.com/trailsense) if you want to see exactly how the data collection works.
Took a look at the dashboard and the wifi probe approach is clever - feels like the trailhead counts line up with what I'd expect on a busy weekend. Nice that nothing leaves the device.
The no-app approach is clever and the wifi probe trick actually makes sense after reading about it. The dashboard view over time looks like the kind of thing I'd check before a weekend hike.
Finally launching TrailSense today!
I really enjoyed working on a product that includes hardware. It was my first time being involved in something like that, and it made the whole project especially exciting.
Also here for any questions about our product :)
clever way to get a busyness signal without cameras or an app install. one thing i'm curious about given how the tech works - modern phones (iOS and most recent android) randomize their MAC address per probe request specifically to prevent exactly this kind of passive counting. does trailsense do any signal-strength/timing clustering to guess that five different randomized addresses over an hour are probably the same phone, or is the count more of a relative busyness proxy (more pings = busier trail) rather than an actual hiker headcount? asking because the accuracy story is pretty different depending on which one it is.
About Trailsense on Product Hunt
“See where people are hiking, without cameras”
Trailsense was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 29 upvotes and 8 comments, placing #9 on the daily leaderboard. Trails can get busy, and others stay empty, but how do you know? We built Trailsense to answer that. Our solar-powered nodes count hikers using anonymized wifi probe requests, the pings a phone sends while scanning for known networks. A dashboard turns those counts into a clear view of how busy each trail is over time. No cameras, no app for hikers to install, and no personal data ever leaving the device.
Trailsense was featured in Hardware (11.4k followers), Data & Analytics (5.7k followers) and Nature & Outdoors (883 followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 7k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Trailsense?
Trailsense was hunted by Francesco Lanthaler. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how Trailsense stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.
Hey, I'm Francesco, one of three people behind Trailsense, along with Felix and Lea.
We build small solar-powered sensor nodes that count how many people pass by on a hiking trail, without cameras and without hikers having to install anything. The nodes listen for wifi probe requests, the background pings a phone sends out while scanning for known networks, and turn them into an aggregated count. No raw probe request data ever leaves the node, and no personal data is stored anywhere in the system.
The idea started at the Tourism Technology Hackathon in 2025, where Tirol Werbung brought us a real problem: they know exactly how many people sleep in which hotel each night, but almost nothing about where those people go during the day. We kept working on it as our master's project, and this year we ran a pilot on the Nordkette in Innsbruck alongside Tirol Werbung.
Right now Trailsense is pre-commercial. The pilot is done, we're refining the dashboard and the node hardware, and we don't have a public demo up yet since it's still a bit rough around the edges. Longer term we want to add a public-facing side too, something like Google Maps traffic data but for hiking trails, so hikers can check how busy a trail is before heading out. For now our focus is the municipality and tourism board side.
We're posting here mainly to get feedback, whether you've built sensor hardware yourself or you're just someone who hikes and has opinions about being tracked outdoors. What would make you trust a system like this to collect data around you? And if you were a hiker using a public facing traffic-map version someday, what would you actually want to see on it?
Our node firmware is open source on GitHub (github.com/trailsense) if you want to see exactly how the data collection works.
Happy to answer any questions.