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Ordnance Survey releases most detailed mapping app yet

Plan your next epic adventure with Ordnance Survey’s most detailed mapping app yet released

If you’re planning a cycling route you need high-quality maps, and Ordnance Survey has just released its most detailed mapping app yet, which is freely available on iOS and Android smartphones. 

Called OS Maps, the new mapping app is aimed at cyclists (as well as walkers, runners, mountaineers and outdoor adventurers) and is available through a website and smartphone app. The app comes preloaded with 500,000 routes.

The app is free to use, but a subscription service unlocks a suite of extra features. What extra features you ask? You can access 607 Explorer and Landranger digital maps, and each of the 15 national parks, providing complete and total coverage of Great Britain. A one-month subscription costs £3.99 and 1 year is £23.99. 

These maps will also be available offline, so you don’t need to burn through your available data or even have any mobile phone reception, and it uses the GPS feature of most smartphones to track your location. 

Ordnance Survey has thoroughly tested the new app, releasing it as a beta last year during which time it has been used by over 750,000 people with lots of feedback providing improvements that have been incorporated into this official release.

os maps screenshot.png

“Over the past decade we’ve seen digital mapping in general come a long way, but as soon as you venture away from urban spaces the detail is lacking. That lack of detail limits possibilities and also presents a safety problem to anyone that solely uses digital mapping to navigate their way through the countryside,” says Nick Giles, Managing Director of Ordnance Survey Leisure.

“With OS Maps, we wanted to create a digital map that has the same high standards in detail and design as our paper maps. The aim has always been to make the great outdoors enjoyable, accessible and safe, and I think OS Maps achieves this and will help more people #GetOutside and get more from their adventures in this fabulous country.”

You can view the desktop version of OS Maps here, download it for iOS 8 and Android. Right, we're off to download the app and have an explore of our local, and not-so-local, area. 

- 19 of the best smartphone cycling apps for iPhone and Android

David worked on the road.cc tech team from 2012-2020. Previously he was editor of Bikemagic.com and before that staff writer at RCUK. He's a seasoned cyclist of all disciplines, from road to mountain biking, touring to cyclo-cross, he only wishes he had time to ride them all. He's mildly competitive, though he'll never admit it, and is a frequent road racer but is too lazy to do really well. He currently resides in the Cotswolds, and you can now find him over on his own YouTube channel David Arthur - Just Ride Bikes

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10 comments

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Jharrison5 | 7 years ago
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An annual subscription can also be bought with £8 worth of Clubcard vouchers.

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andyfatduk | 7 years ago
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So, with OS Maps you can import a GPX route, and overlay it onto the map .. Creating your own route its just not as as slick as RideWithGPS, no snapping to roads / cycle paths.

I tend to plan on RideWithGPS, export to GPX, import onto the OS Maps site, and use that when I'm out..

Offline OS Maps on an iPhone/Android is really great, but its not ViewRanger.

I haven't found an option to export routes out of it yet .

 

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amazon22 | 7 years ago
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Desktop version is hopeless - pretty much everything other than looking at a dumbed down map you have to pay for. Don't bother. OS is all about the money and getting you to pay for the same thing over and over and over again. Bought the whole of the UK from ViewRanger a few years ago - superb. I'd love some way to get better aps onto ny Edge 1000 - even the talkytoaster OSM isn't that good. Full OCM would be ideal.

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pruaga | 7 years ago
2 likes

Big turn off for me is the subscription model.  I want to be able to just buy maps for the areas that interest me for a one off cost, not have a rolling monthly bill which will quickly end up costing a lot more.

There is a rather good Android app called Maverick which allows access to the OS maps on a tile-by-tile basis anyway.

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tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
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Can these be loaded onto an Edge 1000 to get turn by turn directions?

 

I've been converting Google maps using http://www.gpsvisualizer.com/convert_input

 

But it splits the routes up depending on how many waypoints I've created (ie. deviations from the set route), which is massively annoying. Using Garmins own map on the device itself is clunky. RidewithGPS is good supposedly but you have to pay to get turn by turn.

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cjwebb replied to tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
0 likes

unconstituted wrote:

Can these be loaded onto an Edge 1000 to get turn by turn directions?

 

I've been converting Google maps using http://www.gpsvisualizer.com/convert_input

 

But it splits the routes up depending on how many waypoints I've created (ie. deviations from the set route), which is massively annoying. Using Garmins own map on the device itself is clunky. RidewithGPS is good supposedly but you have to pay to get turn by turn.

 

Never done it that way, as used these instructions for OpenStreetMap -http://www.dcrainmaker.com/2013/05/download-garmin-705800810.html

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KiwiMike | 7 years ago
1 like

So £23.99/year, or £90 with Viewranger to buy the entire country, forever.  Or considerably less to buy blocks of the country.

I've had Viewranger since they launched, and it's only got better and better. And you can download and save Open Streetmaps, OpenCycle maps etc, for anywhere *in the world*. 

Fabulous value, that.

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MrB123 | 7 years ago
0 likes

This will need to be pretty special to come close to the latest version of the Viewranger app.

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DaveE128 | 7 years ago
0 likes

Looks like a massive improvement over the previous OSapp, which was utterly rubbish. However the reviews on the Google app store are pretty mixed. I notice that you can't yet use routes that others have made on the Android app, only the desktop version. That will be a big improvement. The default map layer looks fine for road cycling, but no good for off road. I don't think there are any routing features but it's fine for seeing where you are.

Although the interface is far less slick, I think Cyclestreets is far more user to the average cyclist, and the maps are free: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.cyclestreets

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Paul_C replied to DaveE128 | 7 years ago
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DaveE128 wrote:

Although the interface is far less slick, I think Cyclestreets is far more user to the average cyclist, and the maps are free: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=net.cyclestreets

I use OSMand which uses Open Street Maps data...

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