I tested Google Maps vs. Apple Maps to find the best navigation app – and this one wins


Google Maps vs. Apple Maps

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

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ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • Google Maps wins for fast routing, AI, and rich discovery features.
  • Apple Maps is cleaner, simpler, and geared toward Apple users.
  • Both apps are close, but Google Maps is more powerful overall.

I’ll admit it: I’m a Google Maps person. I use it for driving, walking, looking up restaurants and businesses, checking out what a parking lot looks like, travel planning, and occasionally falling into a Street View rabbit hole that might begin with “What does my old childhood home look like today?” and end with me exploring the ancient streets of Rome, dreaming of visiting one day.

But I once preferred Apple Maps. As a longtime Apple user (I got my first Mac when I was 14, nearly 25 years ago, and I switched from Verizon to AT&T in 2007 just so I could get the first iPhone), I will always try everything Cupertino releases. So, back in 2012, when Apple Maps first launched, I gave it a shot. I can’t remember how long I used it for, but it was a couple of years at least.

Also: Google Maps vs. Waze: I’ve used both, and one is much better

I ignored the haters. Let’s be real, Apple Maps was a punchline after its disastrous launch. But at some point, I followed the crowd. Overtime, I became entrenched in Google apps. Eventually, it became obvious that Apple Maps was my backup maps app, the one I’d accidentally open instead of Google Maps. But I know Apple Maps has steadily improved.

I’m a tech editor by day, so I’ve seen and written about countless updates to Apple Maps over the last decade. For example, with iOS 26, Apple added a Preferred Routes feature, which learns the routes I take most often and warns me about delays before I leave.

With these kinds of updates in mind, I set aside my Google Maps bias and compared both apps feature by feature. Which one is better in 2026? Which one should I actually use? Has Apple Maps finally done enough to make me quit Google Maps for good?

Is Google Maps or Apple Maps better?

Let’s look at all the major features of both apps to find a winner. I’m judging them on navigation, travel modes, traffic reports, speed alerts, offline maps, interface, AI, EV support, Street View and historical imagery, and compatibility.

Apple Maps is genuinely good at turn-by-turn navigation now. It gives clear lane guidance, stop sign and traffic light cues in supported areas, speed limit info, route overviews, and multi-stop directions.

I also like Preferred Routes, which learns where you typically drive, such as a work commute, and warns you about traffic delays or closures before you leave. So, if I always take a back road because I like to stop at a coffee shop, Apple Maps should learn that instead of push me onto the highway.

Also: 41 hidden Google Maps settings you should know

Google Maps remembers my route to a point, but it doesn’t learn my routine in the same way. Instead, it defaults to the fastest route. It still does nearly everything Apple Maps does for navigation, including letting me save trips, choose between routes, add stops, or avoid tolls and highways.

Where Google Maps really shines is its depth of traffic data. It has live conditions and alerts, road type awareness, route comparisons, including eco-friendly options, and deep integration with search and place data. It even takes my vehicle into account. So, if you drive an EV, it can prioritize routes with charging stations.

I also like that it explains why a route is faster, slower, more fuel-efficient, or if there are issues ahead, like road jams or stops. Google has a feature called Immersive Navigation, which provides realistic 3D route previews, clear lane context, and easier-to-understand route trade-offs.

Google Maps can even use landmarks to provide navigation directions instead of just distances, so I might hear “Turn left after the Shell station,” rather than “Turn left in 600 feet,” which, in my experience, is very useful.

Apple Maps is clean and effective, but Google Maps feels like it’s doing a lot more to get me from A to B faster and smarter, not just based on my usual route. Google Maps gets my vote here, but Apple Maps has come far.


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Navigation with intelligent routing

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Both apps cover the basics: driving, walking, cycling, public transit, and ride options. So, if you don’t own a vehicle but still need to get somewhere, either app can help you find the best route.

Apple Maps is a pretty low-clutter map, and one hikers might prefer to use. A couple of years ago, it added detailed, curated, and downloadable hiking information for all 63 US national parks. You can browse trails, filter by length and elevation, create routes, and save favorites in your Places Library.

I have to say, though, Google Maps is great in cities. Whether I’m headed somewhere on foot or on a multi-leg transit trip, it offers detailed routes, live schedules, and real-time updates. And if I’m ever confused by the bird’s-eye view and can’t tell which way to walk, AR Live View can overlay 3D arrows onto the street to guide me.

But if I’m being objective and focusing on travel modes alone, this category is a tie, since both apps support a wide range of ways to get around, even if Google Maps often feels more robust and mature.


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Travel modes beyond driving

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Apple Maps lets me report incidents such as accidents, speed checks, traffic, roadwork, hazards, and road closures. I can report using Siri, from the iPhone app, or through CarPlay.

Google Maps also supports incident reporting, including crashes, slowdowns, police, construction, lane closures, objects on the road, low visibility, flooded roads, and unplowed roads. It offers way more options.

I can report from the app, including with Gemini, or through Android Auto, and it benefits from a massive user base. In 2024, CEO Sundar Pichai said Maps surpassed 2 billion users, while Apple Maps was estimated at about 500 million. Neither company has shared updated figures, but Google Maps likely still has the wider reach.

Also: I use Android Auto, and these 5 changes solved my issues

So while Apple Maps is getting better, Google Maps is more detailed and often more accurate, in my experience. When something is off, whether a slowdown, crash, lane blockage, closure, or police activity, Google Maps is better at showing that something is happening and giving me enough context to decide whether to reroute.

This is not a landslide, however. Apple Maps can absolutely get me through a messy drive. But for live traffic and incident awareness, Google Maps still feels like the better option, with more alert types and eyes on the road.


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Traffic and incident reporting

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

This comparison isn’t about Waze, but I’m mentioning it because it pioneered user-led reporting, especially for police activity. I can report not only police, but also mobile cameras, hidden enforcement, and whether officers are set up on the other side of the road. The TL;DR is that it covers a wide range of potential speed traps.

So, what about Apple Maps and Google Maps? Apple Maps lets me report a “speed check,” with no other options, while Google Maps lets me report “police,” also with no additional detail. They’re very basic. In my opinion, these are not the apps to use if your main concern is knowing whether there is police activity ahead.

They earn a tie for this category, and both could use an update if you ask me.


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Police and speed trap alerts

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Google Maps has long been great for offline use. I can download areas ahead of time and still get turn-by-turn directions. It’s a feature I often rely on, because I live rurally and drive around with little to no service. Google Maps can also auto-download recommended areas and lets me control whether downloads happen over Wi-Fi.

Also: I found a free Google Maps alternative that doesn’t track me

But Apple Maps now supports offline maps, too. On iPhone, I can download entire map areas and manage how and when they update, including limiting downloads to Wi-Fi, and I get turn-by-turn directions.

There is no clear winner here anymore.


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Offline maps and data use

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Apple Maps is the cleaner app, by far. Google Maps is more like a Swiss Army knife packed with 47 different tools, while Apple Maps keeps things simple.

When I open Apple Maps, I can search for a route, pick a saved place, or jump back into a recent trip or guide. I can then toggle between map modes like explore, driving, transit, and satellite, and I can access saved places, reports, offline maps, and settings from my profile. That’s about it, and honestly, that’s part of the appeal.

Google Maps is far more powerful, but it can also feel like a lot.

There are pins, labels, photos, reviews, lists, transit layers, and more. It’s great for exploring neighborhoods, researching businesses, or finding restaurants, parks, and stores. I can use Street View to preview a location and switch between layers like satellite, terrain, air quality, wildfires, and 3D buildings.

It also has an AR-powered Lens feature, which lets me point my camera at shops or landmarks and get more information. More recently, Google Maps added Gemini-powered “insider tips,” an updated Explore tab with trending places and curated lists, and Ask Maps, which lets me search using natural, conversational questions.

It can feel overwhelming if I just want directions, but it’s still impressive how much Google Maps can do. It’s evolved into a full travel and discovery tool, not just a navigation app. So, for pure functionality, I prefer Google Maps. I like having a feature-rich interface with plenty of tools that help me get around and understand an area.

But I’ll admit this category can come down to personal preference.


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Interface and design

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

This one is not particularly close.

Apple Maps is integrated with Siri, and Siri can handle basic navigation, incident reports, and route requests. But Apple Maps doesn’t currently offer anything as deep or as smart as Google Maps’ Gemini integration.

Google Maps has Ask Maps, a Gemini-powered conversational experience that can answer complex questions about places and make recommendations. I can ask for something specific, such as a vegan restaurant along my route with parking, and it will use its massive database of places, reviews, and photos to narrow things down.

Also: Gemini in Google Maps: Keep your hands on the wheel 

With the AR-powered Lens feature, I can also ask follow-up questions about whatever I’m seeing. Google Maps added Gemini to navigation, too, and can provide more natural, landmark-based directions. There’s also Immersive Navigation, which is powered by Gemini. It turns 2D maps into a more realistic 3D experience using Street View and aerial imagery to give me a clearer sense of my surroundings before and during a trip.

Also: How to share your location on Android: 5 quick ways

Google Maps is using AI to not only be conversational but also more visual and context-aware. It wins, easily.


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AI and voice assistance

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Apple Maps lets you find charging stations. It technically offers EV routing, but it’s currently limited to select vehicles and regions. When and where it is supported, it can help you plan trips with charging stops and monitor your battery level during the drive. You can set it up through CarPlay or in the iPhone app before starting a route.

Google Maps does much more here. It offers AI-powered EV battery predictions and trip planning for more than 350 Android Auto EV models in the US. It can use your vehicle and current charge to estimate battery levels at arrival, recommend charging stops, factor in charging time, and update ETAs.

Google Maps also lets you specify your EV model, search for charging stations, and filter by plug type and charging speed. So while Apple Maps is still building out this feature, Google Maps offers better tools for EV drivers, along with wider availability and broader compatibility as of 2026.


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EV navigation and charging

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

This is the easiest category to compare.

Google Maps has Street View, which lets me explore just about any road in the world. I have used it to preview entrances, check for parking, scope out rentals, walk through neighborhoods, and even go back in time. Google supports historical Street View imagery in many places, so I can see how just about any place looked years ago.

It can be a little emotional if you use it to revisit old homes, closed businesses, or places that no longer exist.

Also: Your iPhone tracks every place you visit – how to turn off

Apple Maps has Look Around, which is its version of street-level imagery. It looks great… where it is available. That’s the issue: coverage. Look Around is still limited to select cities across North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. I live in upstate NY and seldom see the binoculars icon in Apple Maps.

Google Maps, on the other hand, offers Street View in far more places, including all around where I live. So it wins here. And if you want historical imagery, it wins by an even wider margin.


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Street View and historical imagery

Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

Google Maps works on iPhone, iPad, Android, the web, Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and cars with Google built in. It’s preinstalled or deeply integrated on many Android devices and vehicles, and it’s one of the few apps that feels equally useful whether you are on a phone, in a browser, or using a car display.

Apple Maps works beautifully across Apple devices, including iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and CarPlay. Apple Maps also launched on the web in 2024, finally bringing driving and walking directions to browsers. That makes Apple Maps much more accessible than it once was, though it still does not have a native Android app. 

Google Maps therefore gets the edge for its wider reach across devices, browsers, and vehicles. But both services are available in more than 200 regions and countries across the world. 


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The final scorecard

Let’s tally up which app wins based on the categories above.

Category Winner Why it wins
Navigation and routing Google Maps Faster routing, stronger traffic data, eco routing, Immersive Navigation, and landmark-based directions.
Transit modes Tied Both support driving, walking, biking, transit, and more.
Traffic and incident reporting Google Maps More detailed alerts, broader reporting options, and a larger user base.
Police and speed trap alerts Tied Both offer limited, basic police reporting options.
Offline maps and data use Tied Both now support offline maps with turn-by-turn directions.
Interface and design Google Maps More powerful tools and discovery features, despite a chaotic UI.
AI and voice assistance Google Maps Deeper Gemini integration with Ask Maps, Lens, and contextual navigation.
EV navigation and charging Google Maps Broader EV support, battery predictions, and charger planning.
Street View and historical imagery Google Maps Extensive Street View coverage and historical imagery support.
Availability and compatibility Google Maps Wider reach across devices, platforms, and vehicles.

Total

  • Google Maps: 7 wins
  • Apple Maps: 0 wins
  • Ties: 3

And there it is. Google Maps beats Apple Maps by a wide margin, according to my scorecard. But that does not mean Apple Maps is bad or unusable. In fact, Apple Maps is good enough that I get why iPhone users rely on it from day to day, especially if they love how it remembers preferred routes, or if they use CarPlay, or just enjoy a cleaner, simpler interface.

But Google Maps is still the better overall navigation app. It has richer search, stronger live traffic data, deeper AI integration, better EV planning, Street View, historical imagery, broader compatibility, and more tools for discovering and exploring what’s around you.

When should I use Apple Maps over Google Maps?

Apple Maps is much simpler and easier to use and works fantastic across Apple devices, including CarPlay, but Google Maps is still my go-to when I need to get somewhere fast, see what’s nearby, or check what a place looks like before I show up. It’s packed with useful tools and absolutely worth having installed, no matter what. Here’s a quick decision tree to help you, if you’re still undecided.

Use Apple Maps if…

  • You want the cleanest, least cluttered interface.
  • You use iPhone, Apple Watch, Mac, and CarPlay every day.
  • You want built-in offline maps on iPhone.
  • You mostly drive familiar routes and want Preferred Routes alerts.

Use Google Maps if…

  • You want the most feature-packed navigation app.
  • You want to get somewhere fast with smarter, data-driven routing.
  • You want to see what’s nearby or research places before you go.
  • You like to use Street View or historical imagery.
  • You want more detailed and accurate incident reporting.
  • You prefer Gemini and want deeper AI integration and discovery tools.
  • You drive an EV and want better charging and battery planning.
  • You use Android and want maximum availability and compatibility.

Is Apple Maps better for privacy?

Apple Maps is designed with Apple’s privacy-first approach. That means features like Visited Places are protected with end-to-end encryption and cannot be accessed by Apple. Google Maps offers privacy controls, including an Incognito mode that doesn’t save activity to your account, but it’s also much more tied into Google’s larger search, advertising, reviews, and personalization systems.

Is Apple Maps available on Android?

Not as a native app. Apple Maps is available on the web, including through mobile browsers on Android. Google Maps has native apps for both iOS and Android, plus deep support for Android Auto, CarPlay, and Google built-in vehicles.

Do Apple Maps and Google Maps offer location sharing?

Yes. Both Apple Maps and Google Maps offer location sharing.

In Apple Maps, you can share your current location with a contact (it appears as a pin on the map) or share your ongoing route and estimated time of arrival. Google Maps is a bit more robust, providing continuous, real-time updates, including movement and estimated arrival time. You can choose how long to share your location or keep it on until you manually turn it off.


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Disney+ is embracing the Dark Side, as Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord is about to emerge on the service. Before The Mandalorian brought Star Wars into live-action television, the franchise was thriving in animated form, thanks to the initial success of Star Wars: The Clone Wars. Among the many new twists that the series introduced, one of the most notable developments was the return of Darth Maul after his apparent death in Star Wars: The Phantom Menace.

Now, after several series that have developed the character from a terrifying figure to a tragic Sisyphean antagonist, Maul – Shadow Lord will throw the character into a fight against the tyranny of the Empire, leading to tense chases and surprise alliances:

What is Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord?

The former Sith Lord returns

Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord is set on the newly introduced world of Janix, a planet on the Mid Rim of the galaxy far, far away that has been unbothered by the still young Galactic Empire in the wake of the Clone Wars. While the planet’s Tactical Defense Force keeps the population in check, the planet has become host to individuals looking to avoid Imperial interests, either out of fear for their lives or to rebuild in the shadows.

Following his usurping of Mandalore and escape from Republic custody in The Clone Wars season 7, Maul is attempting to rebuild the Shadow Collective crime syndicate with what remains of his forces, including fellow Dathomirian Zabraks and Mandalorian supercommandos. As Maul’s operations become too much for the TDF to handle, the Empire establishes a foothold on Janix. While grappling with Stormtroopers and Inquisitors, Maul must make an uneasy alliance with a young Jedi on the run if he wants to initiate his plan for revenge.

Who is in Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord?

An Oscar nominee joins the cast

Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord sees Sam Witwer reprise the role of the former Sith Lord-turned-crime lord from his appearances across Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Star Wars: Rebels. Fellow Rebels stars Vanessa Marshall and Steve Blum join him as the Mandalorian Rook Kast and Zabrak fighter Icarus. Meanwhile, Gideon Adlon takes on the role of the young Twilek Padawan Devon Izara, while Dennis Haysbert’s Master Eeko-Dio Daki hopes to guide her in the Dark Times.

Meanwhile, Oscar-nominee Wagner Moura will provide the voice of TDF captain Brander Lawson, with Richard Ayoade voicing his partner Two-Boots, and Charlie Bushnell voicing his son, Rylee. Chris Diamantopoulos and Stephen Stanton will voice crime lords Looti Vario and Marg Krim, David W. Collins will voice Spybot, and A.J. LoCascio will voice Marrok, the Inquisitor first introduced in Ahsoka.

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When does Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord take place?

Stuck between two familiar events

Devon is imprisoned in in Star Wars_ Maul - Shadow Lord. Credit: Lucasfilm

Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord is set during the Dark Times, the period of the Star Wars franchise between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope where the Empire was expanding its power over the galaxy, with those who opposed them choosing to lurk in the shadow. This period has been explored in The Bad Batch, Star Wars Rebels, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Andor, and the Star Wars: Jedi video game franchise, as well as briefly explored in select episodes of the Tales of the Jedi, Tales of the Empire, and Tales of the Underworld anthology series.

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In the trailer itself, Maul and Devon are seen facing Stormtroopers wearing TK armor, an early version of Stormtrooper armor that was introduced in The Bad Batch season 1. This means that the Empire is still in a time of transition from the Galactic Republic to the forces that we see closer to the Star Wars Original Trilogy. As such, Maul – Shadow Lord events are likely happening concurrently with the events of The Bad Batch’s later two seasons.

Maul – Shadow Lord can finally explain the final years of the Sith Lord’s life

Time to explore new horizons

Maul ignites half of his lightsaber in in Star Wars_ Maul - Shadow Lord. Credit: Lucasfilm

While The Clone Wars successfully resurrected Maul and Rebels would give him a fitting end, there is still a large portion of his story left unexplored. While it is unclear whether the series will receive multiple seasons, the show will explore how he rearranged his forces from the Shadow Collective into Crimson Dawn, the faction first introduced in Solo: A Star Wars Story. Paul Bettany’s Dryden Vos did feature as a cameo in The Clone Wars’s final season, but the arc largely focused on Maul’s Mandalorian forces over his other agents. As such, Maul – Shadow Lord can complete his turn from a man well-aware of Smith’s schemes into his own fully-fledged criminal mastermind.

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Two-episode premiere coming soon

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Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord will arrive on Disney+ on April 6th with a two-episode premiere. The series will then release two new episodes every Monday, culminating in the finale on May 4. While one of the shorter Star Wars series, Maul’s long-awaited 10-part story will finally give fans a glimpse into the mind of one of the Dark Side’s most terrifying warriors.



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