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Google Maps

4.1
CategoryMaps & Travel
Download10B+
PriceFree
RatedEveryone
RequiresAndroid 10.0+
DeveloperGoogle LLC

Screenshots

Google Maps screenshot
Google Maps screenshot
Google Maps screenshot
Google Maps screenshot
Google Maps screenshot
Google Maps screenshot

About this app

Reviewing Google Maps is really reviewing two things at once: the best mapping dataset ever assembled, and the data-collection machine that funds it. Two decades of Street View imagery, business listings, transit feeds, and live traffic derived from millions of Android phones make it the navigation app everything else is measured against. It comes preinstalled on most Android devices and shows up in more than ten billion installs.

Nothing here costs money, and that is the point worth pausing on. Maps feeds Google's advertising business through place searches, visited locations, and promoted pins, and by default a signed-in account records far more movement history than most people realise. The app has become more honest about this over time — Timeline data, for instance, is now stored on the device rather than on Google's servers — but the burden of configuring sane defaults still falls on you.

Driving in unfamiliar cities

Turn-by-turn navigation with live traffic rerouting is where the crowd-sourced data pays off most visibly. Lane guidance, speed-limit display in many regions, and hazard reports make it dependable enough that many drivers have stopped considering alternatives.

Public transport and walking

Transit directions cover schedules, platforms, and real-time delays in a huge number of cities, and walking mode includes an augmented-reality Live View for orienting yourself when leaving a station. Coverage quality varies by city, but the breadth is unrivalled.

Deciding where to eat

Place listings bundle reviews, photos, opening hours, busyness estimates, and menus. Review quality suffers from spam and rating inflation, yet the sheer volume of data usually gets you to a reasonable decision faster than any dedicated restaurant app.

Navigation for every mode

Driving, walking, cycling, transit, and combined routes all live in one app, with fuel-efficient routing options for drivers. Rerouting around incidents is fast and usually right, thanks to live speed data from other phones on the road.

Offline maps

Selected areas can be downloaded for offline driving navigation and search. The limits matter: downloads expire and need refreshing, transit and cycling directions are unavailable offline, and coverage of some countries is restricted. Fine for a trip, not a full offline solution.

Street View and immersive imagery

Ground-level imagery for much of the planet lets you scout a parking entrance or hotel front before arriving. It remains genuinely useful in a way few features from 2007 still are, and no competitor matches its coverage.

Timeline

If enabled, Timeline reconstructs everywhere you have been, day by day. Following a major 2024 change it is stored on your device with optional encrypted backup, and Google says it can no longer serve location data from Timeline in response to broad law-enforcement requests.

Privacy & Data Safety

This is the section that decides whether Maps deserves its defaults. Searches, routes, and visited places flow into your Google account's Web & App Activity unless you intervene, and that history informs ads across Google services. Location History became on-device Timeline in 2024, a real improvement, yet search and activity logging remain server-side. The controls exist and work; almost nobody opens them.

  • Review Web & App Activity in your Google account: it, not Timeline, records your Maps searches and can be set to auto-delete after 3, 18, or 36 months.
  • Timeline is off unless enabled and now lives on the device; if you had the old Location History, confirm the migration and delete server-side data you no longer want.
  • Incognito mode in Maps pauses history and personalisation for a session, useful for one-off sensitive searches, though navigation still needs live location.
  • The app works signed out, at a cost: no saved places or personalised suggestions, but noticeably less linkage between your identity and your movements.

Advantages

  • Best-in-class map coverage, traffic data, and place information
  • Every transport mode in one app, mostly free of visible ads while navigating
  • Timeline now stored on-device, limiting bulk location disclosure
  • Offline maps cover the basics for travel without a connection

Updates

Maps updates arrive every week or two on Android, but the app is heavily server-driven, so most visible changes — new place features, interface experiments, AI-generated summaries — appear without any APK update at all. Version numbers tell you little; two phones on the same release can show meaningfully different interfaces depending on which experiments they have been placed in.

  • Completion of the shift from server-side Location History to on-device Timeline
  • AI-assisted features such as summarised reviews and conversational place search
  • Ongoing tweaks to the bottom-bar layout and the balance of recommendations versus plain map

Editor's Assessment

Our verdict

On capability alone, nothing touches Google Maps, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest reviewing. The honest framing is a trade: superb navigation in exchange for feeding one of the most detailed movement datasets in existence, moderated by controls that most users never open. Spend five minutes setting auto-delete on Web & App Activity and deciding deliberately about Timeline, and the trade becomes defensible. Users who want no part of it should look at OsmAnd or Organic Maps and accept rougher edges.

What works

  • Best-in-class map coverage, traffic data, and place information
  • Every transport mode in one app, mostly free of visible ads while navigating
  • Timeline now stored on-device, limiting bulk location disclosure
  • Offline maps cover the basics for travel without a connection

What to know

  • Deep integration with Google's advertising and activity-tracking systems by default
  • Promoted pins and sponsored results blur the line between relevance and paid placement
  • Offline mode excludes transit, cycling, and expires downloads
  • Review spam and inflated ratings weaken place listings

FAQ

Does Google Maps track me even when I am not using it?

Only if permissions and settings allow it. Timeline requires opting in plus background location permission, and Android lets you restrict the app to 'while using' access. The quieter collector is Web & App Activity, which logs searches and routes whenever you use Maps signed in, regardless of background permission. Both are worth reviewing in your Google account settings.

Can I use Google Maps without a Google account?

Yes. Search, directions, and navigation all work signed out on Android, and offline areas can still be downloaded. You lose saved places, home and work shortcuts, personalised recommendations, and contribution features. For privacy-conscious users this is the single most effective change, since activity is no longer tied to an account profile.

What happened to Location History?

Google replaced it with on-device Timeline in a change rolled out through 2024. Your movement history is now stored on the phone itself, with an optional encrypted backup, instead of on Google's servers. Existing users were prompted to migrate or lose old data, so anyone who ignored those prompts should check what remains under their account's data settings.

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