Your phone's default map is for driving, not for your run, hike, or walk. We compare the best apps—from Strava's social motivation to AllTrails' massive trail library—to help you find the right tool for your adventure.
You need more than a line on a screen. You want to know if that "gentle hill" is actually a monster, or if you can even get a signal two miles in. The right app doesn't just record where you've been. It helps you decide where to go.
Most people just use whatever map came with their phone. And that’s fine for driving. But for a run, a hike, or a walk through a new city, you need something built for the job.
There's a reason you see Strava screenshots everywhere. It’s a reliable log for your runs, tracking pace, distance, and elevation. But its real draw is the social part—seeing friends' activities and competing on local "segments" is a huge motivator. Strava's heatmaps are also genuinely useful for finding popular paths when you're in a new town.
Komoot is for planners. It’s built to tell you the type of terrain you're getting into—paved road, gravel path, single-track trail. This is a huge deal for cyclists and trail runners. You can build a route from scratch and it shows you the surface types and elevation profile before you even step out the door.
AllTrails is for hikers. Its strength is the massive library of user-generated routes, with reviews, photos, and recent conditions. People leave notes like "trail is a mud pit after yesterday's rain" or "lots of wild deer this morning," which is info you just don't get from a basic map. It has over 400,000 trails.
I remember once, I was trying to beat a personal record on a trail I'd found on AllTrails. It was exactly 4:17 PM, the sun was getting low, and my old 2011 Honda Civic was parked what felt like miles away. Seeing my live dot moving along the pre-loaded route on the screen was the only thing that kept me from turning back.
Sometimes the best tool is a more focused one.
If you're heading somewhere with no cell service, you need an app with good offline maps. Gaia GPS and Organic Maps are top contenders. Organic Maps is free, privacy-focused, and lets you download detailed maps to use anywhere. Gaia GPS is a beast for backcountry navigation, with detailed topographic maps that a lot of serious hikers and overlanders swear by.
Or maybe you just want simplicity. Footpath is fantastic for just drawing a route and following it. It has a simple point-and-click interface for creating routes that's about as user-friendly as it gets. PlotARoute is another that takes a simpler approach.
It's easy to get lost in feature lists. Here's what you should probably look for.
Offline maps are non-negotiable if you're leaving populated areas. An app has to let you download your route beforehand. GPS accuracy is also key—a tracker is useless if it thinks you're in the river next to the trail. Geo Tracker is known for its precision. Finally, watch the battery drain. Constant GPS will kill your phone. Apps like Maps.Me are designed to be less power-hungry because they work offline.
The goal is to build the habit of getting out there. Seeing your progress helps. Some people use dedicated habit trackers, like Trider, to build that routine of getting out the door in the first place.
The best app is the one that gets you outside. Most of these have free versions. Download a couple, track a walk around your neighborhood, and see which one feels right. See which one makes you want to go a little bit further.
Need to track a phone? This guide breaks down your best options, from Apple's free "Find My" for simple sharing to comprehensive family safety apps and employee trackers for work.
There's no such thing as the "most accurate" tracking app, because accuracy depends on what you're measuring. For location, dedicated hardware will always beat a phone; for habits, accuracy is just a measure of your own honesty.
A habit tracker is a tool designed to fight the friction of daily life that derails good intentions. It provides the structure and motivation to turn your goals into consistent actions using simple reminders and the powerful psychology of building a streak.
Airline apps are often the last to report delays. A dedicated flight tracker provides faster, more accurate data on gate changes and cancellations, saving you from wasting time at the airport.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
Get it on Play Store