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I have a web app where if a user clicks on a link it should open up a map. The best solution that I can think of is to open up a new tab/window to google maps using the target="_blank" attribute.

But I think that it would be best to open up the device's map app instead of google map.

I know that you can have the user's phone app to pop when the user clicks on a phone number with the href attribute pointing to tel:<the phone number>. I am wondering if this is also possible with the map app.

Is there a way to allow an anchor tag to open the mobile device's map app when the user clicks it?

Sal Rahman
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    possible duplicate question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4642481/android-launch-google-map-via-web-url or if not then some useful information – Philip Bevan May 14 '12 at 14:27
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    Are there any better answers to this question now that it's 2016? Please let me know if things have changed since 2012. – 4castle Feb 16 '16 at 14:47
  • This one is now in 2023 apparently still the way to go (detect the device and use the corresponding scheme): https://stackoverflow.com/a/34359246/2776727 – Andreas Jun 22 '23 at 08:56

9 Answers9

62

You can use the GEO URI Scheme "geo:latitude,longitude" specified by RFC 5870 in a link such as

<a href="geo:124.028582,-29.201930" target="_blank">Click here for map</a>

There's also the comgooglemaps:, which launches the Google Maps app for iOS, for example:

comgooglemaps://?center=40.765819,-73.975866&zoom=14&views=traffic

Where

  • center: This is the map viewport center point. Formatted as a comma separated string of latitude,longitude.
  • mapmode: Sets the kind of map shown. Can be set to: standard or streetview. If not specified, the current application settings will be used.
  • views: Turns specific views on/off. Can be set to: satellite, traffic, or transit. Multiple values can be set using a comma-separator. If the parameter is specified with no value, then it will clear all views.
  • zoom: Specifies the zoom level of the map.

And as techtheatre said, you can use a regular Apple Maps link to trigger Apple Maps:

//maps.apple.com/?q=Raleigh,NC

Leaving off the protocol will automatically select the correct one to use, so if you wanted to have a dynamic link you could just create some conditional code that changes the link between google.com and apple.com depending on which system you're on.

Community
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Alex W
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    This url structure is unsupported on Apple devices (at least on iOS 5.0.1), unfortunately. I think the solution will require detecting the user agent and providing an appropriate link per device. – Gareth Saul Oct 25 '12 at 10:08
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    I can't get either of these to work now. Guess they're no longer supported in 2014. – Primus202 Sep 17 '14 at 22:13
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Actually...now that Apple has their own map application, they no longer catch Google maps links and route them into the mapping application (by default...though this can be changed on the device). As such, you now must do some sniffing to determine if the device is Android or Apple. If you use the correct link for the correct mobile OS, the device will catch the intent and instead of using the browser, will go into the mapping app.

If Android, link like this:

https://maps.google.com/?q=Houston,+TX

If Apple, link like this:

http://maps.apple.com/?q=Houston,+TX

This is certainly a pain, and hopefully the W3c will eventually standardize a map trigger (like tel: for phone numbers). Good luck!

techtheatre
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  • Great response! Works well for me. – Rich Jun 02 '14 at 00:44
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    You can also add "maps:" prefix to google URL, and the mobile device Android OR iOS will open native maps app (iOS maps, google maps or wathever), example: maps:http://maps.google.com/maps?sensor=true&saddr=&daddr=Houston,+TX (in this case with routes, if you're not intrested just use link from the answer) – Paulo Lima Oct 23 '17 at 12:12
18

No need for anything fancy. You can simply double link the address like so.

<a href='https://maps.google.com/?q=addressgoeshere'>
  <a href='https://maps.apple.com/maps?q=addressgoeshere'>
    Address</a></a>

On Android this will open the Google maps app, and on iOS this will open the Apple maps app. (Untested on Windows phone)

Vincent
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    Nested anchor elements are not valid HTML. – User Sep 07 '20 at 01:15
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    How on Earth does this work? Is it just a huge coincidence that it opens the right app? – Jacob Feb 02 '21 at 17:17
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    this is the best answer! very very simple! (and it just worked for me jul 2021) ... i don't think it matters that it isn't valid HTML ... one tip i'd like to add: format for "addressgoeshere" should be like this: `1+Main+Street+City+State+Zip` – aequalsb Jul 29 '21 at 19:07
  • Exactly why is double-linking like this needed? – Kalnode Apr 17 '22 at 14:58
5

Here's my jQuery solution for this issue. I wanted to be able to detect the correct map to open up. In 2019, microformats still don't automatically make a link for mobile phones.

I used the solution from this article https://medium.com/@colinlord/opening-native-map-apps-from-the-mobile-browser-afd66fbbb8a4 but modified it to make it current and dynamic.

And, modified the code so I could have an address block in my html. That address is stripped to the basics and sent to the appropriate maps app.

HTML

<span class="map-link">6555 Hollywood Blvd<br/>Hollywood, CA 90028</span>

JavaScript

$(document).on('click','.map-link',function() {
    var address = $(this).html();
    address = $('<div/>')
      .html(address)
      .text() // strip tags
      .replace(/\s\s+/g, " "); // remove spaces
    address = encodeURIComponent(address);
    if ((navigator.platform.indexOf('iPhone') != -1) || (navigator.platform.indexOf('iPad') != -1) || (navigator.platform.indexOf('iPod') != -1)){/* if we're on iOS, open in Apple Maps */
        window.open('http://maps.apple.com/?q=' + address);
    } else { /* else use Google */
        window.open('https://maps.google.com/maps?q=' + address);
    }
});

CSS

.map-link { text-decoration: underline; text-decoration-style: dotted;cursor: pointer ;}
.map-link:hover { text-decoration-style:solid;}
Andy P
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Scot Nery
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2

Attending an old party here.. However, i am still struggling with this in 2021 :D

It appears that using the following link

http://maps.apple.com/?q=Houston,+TX

Opens Apple maps on apple devices and google maps on non apple ones. Thanks apple!

Anoxy
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1

In 2020 use these subdomains : https://maps.app.goo.gl/pQAhDLJDNaYQJ9Np7

You can get it from your Maps app when you share the place.

Works on browser/Android/Iphone

Ythollet
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  • Given a latitude and longitude, how do you make the string at the end? – Nicolas Raoul Jan 13 '21 at 11:39
  • String is generated by Maps app. For given lat/long you should zoom on your point till you don't see knowing point around otherwise it takes the closest knowing place : https://maps.app.goo.gl/LfxdMD4QV3DVsCzM9 vs https://maps.app.goo.gl/sk84dXhYbn2Gb7Ms9 *without red pin – Ythollet Jan 14 '21 at 12:29
0

This simple link is working great for me

<a href='https://www.google.com/maps/place/{{device?.gps_lat}},{{device?.gps_long}}' target="_blank">
Rami Alloush
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-2

Yep, tags like data-type etc. did not work for me as well. I used direct link from Google (you can choose "share point" and it will give direct html which will point to the location).

It will open google maps in browser.

-2

For me, the best answer was to standardize a map tag, such as "MAP:".

Then to make an address invoke maps, preface it with MAP:.

So to tell a friend where something is, use something like: Map: 123 any street PA 98234.

Then when the address is clicked (for a phone, tapped), the default mapping app is invoked.

Added from comment:

The idea was for e-mail and texting, however if you want a code example, this works on android:

try
{
    String uri = "geo:0,0?q=" + Address;
    Intent intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, Uri.parse(uri));
    intent.addFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK);
    getApplicationContext().startActivity(intent);
}
catch (SecurityException es)
{
    if (LOG) Log.e("Dbg", "Map failed", es);
}
catch (ActivityNotFoundException e)
{
    if (LOG) Log.e("Dbg", "Map failed", e);
}
Owen Blacker
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  • The idea was for e-mail and texting, however if you want a code example, this works on android: try { String uri = "geo:0,0?q=" + Address; Intent intent; intent = new Intent(Intent.ACTION_VIEW, Uri.parse(uri)); intent.addFlags(Intent.FLAG_ACTIVITY_NEW_TASK); getApplicationContext().startActivity(intent); } catch (SecurityException es) { if (LOG) Log.e("Dbg", "Map failed", es); } catch (ActivityNotFoundException e) { if (LOG) Log.e("Dbg", "Map failed", e); } – user2515235 Nov 25 '17 at 03:13