The way digital nomads and long-term travellers stay connected is changing rapidly, and few people are shaping that shift as directly as Matt Gray, founder and CEO of The Pangea Technology Group. In this episode of the Nomad Summit Podcast, Matt joins Palle Bo and Christoph Huebner to explore how Pangea aims to solve a problem every traveller knows well: finding out too late that a friend was in the same city.
With more than a decade on the road, over 100 countries visited, and a history of building community across continents, Matt brings both personal experience and strategic insight into how technology can fundamentally change global mobility.
This conversation offers a deep look at the future of travel tech, the realities of scaling a community platform, and why Pangea’s integration of Overlap and Nomadigo could reshape how nomads meet, move, and explore.
The Moment That Sparked Pangea
Like many nomads, Matt repeatedly found himself leaving a city just as friends were arriving. The serendipity of bumping into someone by chance was wonderful, but the missed opportunities were far more common.
That frustration created the seed for Pangea. Instead of hoping to cross paths, what if travellers could see where their network is going to be in the future, not just where they are now? What if we stopped relying on luck to stay connected?
Pangea was built to answer this exact question: a simple but powerful platform that lets travellers share their movement plans and see where their people will be next.
Three Platforms Become One: The Acquisitions of Overlap and Nomadigo
One of the biggest developments in the nomad tech world this year was Pangea’s acquisition of Overlap and Nomadigo, two platforms widely used by communities like Remote Year, WiFi Tribe, and independent nomads.
Before, travellers were scattered across multiple apps. Someone might have friends on Overlap, others on Nomadigo, and others on Pangea. No single place showed the full picture.
Matt describes how users kept asking the same question:
Why can’t I share my travel plans in one place?
By merging these platforms into Pangea, the user base is now united, creating the network effect needed to make the tool genuinely valuable. Together, the combined community sits at around 50,000 users and growing.
Beyond Nomads: Understanding the Real Target Audience
A big part of the discussion revolves around redefining who Pangea is built for. Surprisingly, not every digital nomad is the ideal user.
If you spend nine months in Bali or six months in Bansko, you generally know who is around you. But travellers who move every few weeks benefit enormously from visibility into where friends will be.
Pangea is built for people who:
- travel frequently
- have flexibility in their schedule
- want to make decisions based on where their network is heading next
This includes digital nomads, yes, but also business travellers, seasonal workers, extreme travellers, and even families wanting to track loved ones across the globe. Matt estimates this market to be between 100 and 200 million people.
Future Features and the Road Ahead
Pangea’s onboarding process is intentionally thorough, helping users input enough meaningful data to make the platform valuable from day one. More automation, including optional approximate GPS location sharing, is coming in a privacy conscious way.
Matt also sees huge potential in integrating niche travel tools, apps, and services. Instead of fragmented platforms where users must enter the same travel data multiple times, Pangea wants to create a unified ecosystem. This approach mirrors what Matt saw in his previous fintech career, where consolidation simplified and improved the user experience.
Monetization Without Ads: A Better Travel Economy
Unlike many social platforms, Pangea will not rely on advertising. Instead, revenue will come from helping travellers find curated experiences that they can book directly through the platform. Users pay the same price, vendors avoid ad spend, and Pangea earns a commission.
This keeps the platform focused on utility, not content feeds and distractions. The goal is to add value by connecting travellers to meaningful activities, events, and opportunities that enhance their journeys.
Cape Town Nomad Week: A Glimpse into Community Building
In addition to Pangea, Matt is co hosting Nomad Week in Cape Town alongside Andrea Smith, a long-standing figure in the South African nomad community.
The event includes talks, hikes, beach gatherings, collaborations with partners across Africa, and even a 34 bedroom villa party in the Cape Winelands. It is a community driven experience that mirrors Pangea’s mission: bringing people together in real life through shared movement and shared interests.
Why This Episode Matters for the Nomad Community
This conversation goes far beyond app features. It taps into a global shift in how nomads choose destinations, how they meet people, and how they navigate a lifestyle that depends on movement and connection.
Matt’s vision represents the next chapter of the digital nomad landscape:
More connected.
More intentional.
More community driven.
For anyone living a global lifestyle, Pangea is shaping what comes next.
Key Takeaways
- Pangea was created to solve the problem of missed connections among global travellers
- Overlap and Nomadigo have merged into Pangea, creating a unified community of around 50,000 users
- The ideal user is someone who travels frequently and makes flexible decisions based on where others will be
- No ads are planned in the monetization model, keeping Pangea clutter free and user focused
- Future integrations aim to combine many niche travel tools into one ecosystem
- Cape Town Nomad Week reflects the in-person community building parallel to Pangea’s digital mission
- The market for this kind of platform is much broader than just digital nomads


0 Comments