
Mara Ellison
Mara led overland trips across East and Southern Africa for eight years before co-founding the studio.
We started in 2017 with one trip, six travelers, and a stubborn belief that travel should feel like being shown around by a friend — not herded through an itinerary.

Atlas & Co. started as a notebook — a list of guesthouses, family kitchens, and quiet roads our founders had collected across a decade of slow travel. When friends began asking us to plan their trips, the notebook turned into a studio.
Eight years later, we're still small on purpose. Every itinerary is shaped by a destination specialist who's spent real time on the ground, and every departure is built around locally-owned stays and small-group guides.
— Mara Ellison & Tomás Reyes, founders
The lines we won't cross, and the ones we keep returning to.
We work with locally-owned businesses, pay guides a fair day rate, and publish where every trip dollar goes. More of your trip stays in the place you came to see.
We'll never oversell a destination. If a place is overrun, a season is wrong, or a route is closed, we say so — and suggest a different way in.
We design trips that minimize internal flights, favor trains and ferries, and stay longer in fewer places. Better for the places you visit — and a better trip.
A small group of destination specialists, all of whom have lived, worked, or spent serious time in the regions they design trips for.

Mara led overland trips across East and Southern Africa for eight years before co-founding the studio.

A former food and travel writer, Tomás designs our Mexico, Peru, and Patagonia departures.

Anya spent four years in Tbilisi and leads our Georgia, Armenia, and Silk Road programs.

A Kyoto-based guide, Reo designs our Japan departures and our slower Bali and Vietnam loops.
Six travelers, ten days in the Faroes. The notebook starts to take shape.
Mara and Tomás lease a small office in Edinburgh's Old Town and hire our first destination lead.
We pause, redesign every itinerary to be train- and ferry-first, and publish our impact figures for the first time.
We open Japan, the Caucasus, and Central Asia — three regions our team has spent the last two years on the ground.
Twelve thousand travelers later, we're still small, still in Edinburgh, and still reading the same notebook.