Why people leave Google Earth
- Telemetry and account-tied use. Google Earth ties usage to your Google account, feeds into Web & App Activity, and shares data with the broader Google services graph.
- Pro features behind sign-in. Measuring tools, KML import, and historical imagery sit behind a Google account and the Pro tier on desktop, narrowing what you can do anonymously on mobile.
- 2D-first redesign. Recent updates de-emphasised the 3D fly-through experience that made Earth distinct, and many users feel the new mobile UI is closer to Maps than the original Earth product.
- Battery and storage cost. Loading 3D imagery for a city pulls hundreds of megabytes and drains the battery faster than 2D OSM-based maps.
- No offline mode that respects privacy. Cached imagery is for the active session only and the app does not work properly without a Google sign-in for most features.
If any of that pushes you to compare, here are 7 Google Earth alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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Google Maps if you want the closest single-app fallback. 3D buildings in major cities, Street View, satellite layer, and Live View all in one app.
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Marble Maps if you want a true virtual globe. KDE’s open-source globe app rotates the planet without account requirements.
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Organic Maps if privacy is a hard requirement. Fully offline, open-source OSM client, no trackers, no account.
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OsmAnd if you need topographic and terrain data. Contour lines, GPX, custom routing, and offline detail go deeper than any consumer app.
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HERE WeGo if you want offline navigation with 3D buildings. Country-sized offline downloads, no premium tier, no ads.
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Magic Earth if privacy-respecting navigation with 3D mapping is your priority. OSM-based, no location tracking, freemium.
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Sygic GPS Navigation if you want premium 3D car navigation with hardware-grade routing. Monthly-updated offline maps with detailed 3D city models.
Stay on Google Earth if you specifically want the global high-resolution satellite imagery library and the curated Voyager tours. The imagery archive is irreplaceable; everything around it has alternatives.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Offline | 3D imagery | Privacy | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Google Maps | Closest fallback | Limited | Yes (cities) | Google account | Free |
| Marble Maps | Virtual globe | Yes (OSM tiles) | Limited | Strong | Free |
| Organic Maps | Privacy + offline | Yes | No | Strongest | Free |
| OsmAnd | Topo and terrain | Yes | No | Strong | Free / paid tiers |
| HERE WeGo | Offline navigation | Yes (country-wide) | Yes (cities) | Strong | Free |
| Magic Earth | Privacy navigation | Yes | Yes (cities) | Strong | Free / paid traffic |
| Sygic GPS | Premium 3D nav | Yes | Yes (detailed) | Standard | Paid |
1. Google Maps — closest single-app fallback
Google Maps absorbs much of what Earth does for casual users. The 3D buildings layer covers most major cities, satellite imagery is the same source, and Street View handles the ground-level fly-around use case. For users who installed Earth specifically to look at the world from above, Maps now does about 80 percent of the same job in one app.
The trade-off is privacy posture. Maps shares all the same data flows as Earth and adds Timeline location history, place reviews, and the broader account-tied tracking that the OSM alternatives below avoid.
Advantages:
- 3D buildings on most major cities
- Same satellite imagery source as Earth
- Street View included
- Free
Disadvantages:
- Same data flows as Earth
- Account-tied use
- Ads on the map view
Pricing: Free.
2. Marble Maps — KDE’s virtual globe
Marble is the KDE community’s virtual globe and atlas project. The mobile build presents OpenStreetMap on a rotatable sphere with multiple map themes, including topographic, satellite, and historical layers. There is no account requirement, no telemetry, and no upsell.
The trade-off is feature breadth. Marble does not match Google Earth’s high-resolution satellite imagery and lacks the photographic 3D city layer. For students, educators, and anyone who wanted Earth specifically for the globe-view experience without telemetry, Marble is the cleanest fit.
Advantages:
- True virtual globe with rotation
- Multiple map themes
- Open source, no telemetry
- Free, no ads
Disadvantages:
- No high-resolution satellite imagery
- No photographic 3D cities
- Smaller community than OSM mainstream apps
Pricing: Free.
3. Organic Maps — offline OSM with no telemetry
Organic Maps is the cleanest offline-first OSM client. Maps download per-region, the app never asks for an account, and there is no analytics layer. For travelers who used Earth’s offline cache to plan trips, Organic Maps replaces the planning use case with a more reliable offline experience.
The trade-off is the visual layer. Organic Maps draws OSM data as styled vector tiles, not satellite imagery. The 3D imagery and the historical layers Earth offers are not available. For privacy-first offline mapping, this is the strongest pick on the list.
Advantages:
- Fully offline once maps are downloaded
- No tracking, no account, no ads
- Open source under Apache 2.0
- Light footprint
Disadvantages:
- No satellite imagery
- No 3D city models
- OSM-data only
Pricing: Free.
4. OsmAnd — topo and terrain depth
OsmAnd is the deepest open-source OSM client on Android. Contour lines, hillshades, GPX import and export, custom routing profiles for cycling and hiking, and offline maps for entire continents are all included. For users who installed Earth to study terrain or plan outdoor routes, OsmAnd does that better than Earth ever did.
The trade-off is learning curve. OsmAnd’s settings are dense and the free tier caps the number of map regions you can download. The paid OsmAnd+ on Google Play and the donation-supported OsmAnd~ on F-Droid both unlock unlimited regions.
Advantages:
- Contour lines, hillshades, terrain data
- GPX, custom routing, offline maps
- Open source, no telemetry on the F-Droid build
- Deepest feature set on this list
Disadvantages:
- Steep learning curve
- Free Play Store tier caps map regions
- No high-resolution satellite imagery
Pricing: Free with caps; OsmAnd+ paid in-app on Google Play; OsmAnd~ free on F-Droid.
5. HERE WeGo — offline navigation with 3D buildings
HERE WeGo is the consumer app from HERE Technologies, the mapping company owned by Audi, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz. Country-sized offline maps download for free, the app shows 3D buildings in major cities, and there is no premium tier or ad layer. For users who used Earth as a reference atlas, HERE delivers a tighter offline experience.
The trade-off is the imagery layer. HERE’s satellite layer is shallower than Google’s, and the 3D city layer covers fewer cities than Earth’s photogrammetry archive. Routing covers car, walking, cycling, transit, and taxi.
Advantages:
- Country-sized offline maps
- 3D buildings in major cities
- No premium tier, no ads
- Public transit in 1,300 plus cities
Disadvantages:
- Shallower satellite layer than Earth
- 3D city coverage smaller than Earth
- POI data thinner than Google
Pricing: Free.
6. Magic Earth — privacy-respecting 3D navigation
Magic Earth from Magic Lane uses OpenStreetMap data with proprietary 3D rendering on top. The privacy claim is concrete: no location tracking, no account requirement, no ad layer in the free version. Live traffic and turn-by-turn navigation are included free; advanced traffic-aware routing and lane guidance sit behind a paid tier.
For users who want Earth’s 3D feel paired with navigation rather than pure exploration, Magic Earth is the closest match without the Google account dependency.
Advantages:
- 3D map rendering with privacy posture
- No account, no tracking
- Free turn-by-turn navigation
- Crowd-sourced traffic
Disadvantages:
- Smaller community than mainstream alternatives
- Some advanced features paid
- 3D imagery less detailed than Earth’s photogrammetry
Pricing: Free, with optional paid traffic-aware routing.
7. Sygic GPS Navigation — premium 3D car navigation
Sygic ships detailed 3D city models alongside hardware-grade offline navigation. Monthly map updates, lane guidance, head-up display mode, dashcam, and real-view AR routing make the app the closest thing to a paid satnav unit on a phone. For drivers who used Earth to plan road trips and visualise terrain in 3D, Sygic moves that into the navigation flow.
The trade-off is price. Sygic uses a paid model with a free trial; full features unlock through a yearly or lifetime licence. Free users can use basic offline navigation; advanced features require a subscription.
Advantages:
- Detailed 3D city models
- Lane guidance, HUD mode, dashcam
- Monthly map updates
- 200 million plus drivers globally
Disadvantages:
- Paid for full features
- App size larger than alternatives
- Free tier limited
Pricing: Free trial; paid yearly or lifetime licences.