Geospatial Data
Location-based data — maps, boundaries, points of interest and mobility data — used for mapping, logistics and location intelligence.
Geospatial data covers maps, administrative boundaries, points of interest, and location-based datasets used to build mapping products, logistics tools and location intelligence applications.
Open sources like OpenStreetMap provide a strong free base layer, while commercial providers add curated points-of-interest data, delivery-grade accuracy or specialized coverage.
When to use it
- You need map, boundary or points-of-interest data for a product
- You're doing location-based market or site-selection analysis
- You need mobility or foot-traffic data for research
Common use cases
Buying criteria
- Regional coverage and detail depth
- Update frequency for points of interest
- Licensing terms (attribution, share-alike requirements)
- Format compatibility with your GIS/mapping stack
Risks and limitations
- Community-sourced data coverage can vary significantly by region
- Check attribution and license requirements before commercial use
Recommended providers
OpenStreetMap
4.2/5A free, community-maintained map of the world providing open geospatial data used across countless mapping and location applications.
Bright Data
4.6/5A large web data platform combining proxy networks, scraping infrastructure and ready-made datasets for enterprise data collection.
Oxylabs
4.5/5An enterprise-focused web data platform providing proxy networks, scraper APIs and curated datasets with strong compliance positioning.
Frequently asked questions
Is OpenStreetMap good enough for a commercial mapping product?
For many use cases, yes — it's widely used as a base layer commercially. For specialized needs like delivery-grade routing or curated POI data, commercial providers may add value on top.