Why people leave Citymapper
- Citymapper Club paywall on features that used to be free. Offline mode, real-time bus locations on every line, and lifetime trip history sit behind the subscription tier. Riders who used to rely on offline maps for the Tube find them gated.
- Patchy coverage outside major cities. Citymapper is excellent in London, New York, Paris, and a handful of metros. Smaller UK cities, most of continental Europe, and large parts of Asia and South America are thin or unsupported.
- Heavy ride-share promotion. The home screen and journey results push Uber, Bolt, and bike-share partners hard. The cleanest “just take the bus” view sometimes hides under a stack of comparison cards.
- Battery and data usage on long sessions. Live arrivals and bus tracking keep a continuous data stream open. Multi-hour journeys with GO mode running drain a phone faster than offline maps would.
- Notification noise on disruption. The app tries to be helpful with disruption pings, but enabling them on multiple subscribed lines turns the notification feed into clutter.
If any of those push you to compare, here are 7 Citymapper alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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Google Maps if you want the broadest global coverage and a single app for transit, walking, cycling, and driving.
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Moovit if you travel widely and want the most extensive global transit network in one app.
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Transit if you live in the US, Canada, or a major European city and want crowdsourced live arrivals.
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TfL Go if you mainly use Citymapper for London and want the official source.
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HERE WeGo if you cross borders often and want free offline transit and driving maps.
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Mapy.com if you mix urban transit with hiking in central Europe.
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Trainline if your journeys involve UK or EU rail and you also want to book the ticket.
Stay on Citymapper if you live in London, New York, or Paris and you have already paid for Citymapper Club.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Coverage | Offline | Free | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Google Maps | Everyday all-rounder | Global | Region | Yes | 4.0 |
| Moovit | Widest transit catalogue | 3,500+ cities | Premium | Yes | 4.5 |
| Transit | Crowdsourced arrivals | 200+ metros | No | Yes | 4.6 |
| TfL Go | London transit | London | Limited | Yes | 4.4 |
| HERE WeGo | Free offline + transit | 100+ countries | Worldwide | Yes | 4.4 |
| Mapy.com | Urban + outdoor | Worldwide | Worldwide | Yes | 4.5 |
| Trainline | UK + EU rail booking | UK + EU | App tickets | Yes | 4.7 |
1. Google Maps — the global default
Google Maps offers transit directions in nearly every city Citymapper covers, plus thousands more that Citymapper does not. Live arrivals, walking transfers, and multi-modal options sit alongside driving and cycling routes. Offline regions cover walking and driving but not transit, which is the main feature gap against Citymapper Club.
Google Maps vs Citymapper for daily London commuting is close; Citymapper’s interface still feels denser with rail-specific data, but Google Maps wins on global reliability. The trade-off is the wider Google data footprint and the promoted-place creep in search results.
Advantages:
- Available in nearly every major and mid-size city
- Walking, cycling, driving, and transit in one app
- Live arrivals on most major networks
- Offline regions for non-transit modes
Disadvantages:
- Promoted places creep into search
- Offline transit is not supported
- Google account ties data to your profile
Pricing: Free.
Bottom line: Pick Google Maps if you travel widely; coverage and reliability outweigh Citymapper’s denser city-specific UI.
2. Moovit — the largest transit catalogue
Moovit covers 3,500 plus cities across 100 plus countries, far broader than Citymapper. The app aggregates official transit data with crowdsourced corrections, giving live arrivals, route suggestions, and step-by-step directions for buses, trains, ferries, and more. Service alerts and disruption pings work in many cities. The free tier is solid; Moovit Premium removes ads and unlocks offline use.
Moovit vs Citymapper on small-city coverage is no contest. If you commute somewhere Citymapper has not mapped, Moovit usually has the timetable.
Advantages:
- 3,500+ cities, 100+ countries
- Live arrivals and crowdsourced corrections
- Service disruption alerts
- Strong UI for accessibility planning
Disadvantages:
- Ads in the free tier
- Some routes lean on user reports rather than official data
- Premium needed for offline mode
Pricing: Free with ads. Moovit Premium subscription removes ads and adds offline.
Bottom line: Pick Moovit if you travel between cities Citymapper does not cover; the catalogue is the largest on this list.
3. Transit — crowdsourced live arrivals
Transit is the favourite of many North American and European commuters because of GO trip tracking and crowdsourced bus locations. The home screen surfaces every nearby line in one scrollable list, with live arrivals at a glance. Transit Royale subscription unlocks ad-free use, premium maps, and detailed bike-share info.
Transit vs Citymapper on the home-screen experience is preference-driven. Transit goes wide; Citymapper goes deep with its journey planner. North American commuters tend to prefer Transit; Londoners tend to prefer Citymapper.
Advantages:
- One-glance home screen of every nearby line
- Live arrivals with crowdsourced corrections
- GO trip tracking with step-off alerts
- Strong bike and scooter integration
Disadvantages:
- Coverage thinner outside North America and major EU metros
- No offline transit
- Royale subscription needed for ad-free
Pricing: Free with ads. Transit Royale subscription available.
Bottom line: Pick Transit for a one-glance overview of every nearby line, especially in North American cities.
4. TfL Go — the official London transit app
TfL Go is the official Transport for London app. It shows live status across Tube, London Overground, Elizabeth line, DLR, Tram, bus, and National Rail in the capital, with step-free routes that adapt to station accessibility. Oyster top-up, contactless management, and journey history sit in the same app. For Londoners who use Citymapper mainly for the Tube, TfL Go is the official fallback.
TfL Go vs Citymapper inside London is close on planning. Citymapper still has a denser multi-mode comparison view; TfL Go wins on accessibility, contactless, and disruption authority.
Advantages:
- Official live status from TfL
- Step-free journey planning
- Oyster top-up and contactless management
- Free with no ads
Disadvantages:
- London only
- Smaller bike, scooter, and ride-share integration than Citymapper
- No multi-city support
Pricing: Free.
Bottom line: Pick TfL Go for London, especially if you tap with contactless and need authoritative live status.
5. HERE WeGo — free offline transit and driving
HERE WeGo offers public transport directions in 1,300 plus cities and free country-sized offline maps for driving, walking, and cycling. The HERE map data is the same dataset many car manufacturers ship in their dashboards. Offline use covers everything except live arrivals, which is the main trade-off against Citymapper.
HERE WeGo vs Citymapper for travel across borders is mostly about offline reliability. Citymapper Club covers offline only in selected cities; HERE WeGo covers entire countries for free.
Advantages:
- Free country-sized offline downloads
- Public transport in 1,300+ cities
- Same data as in-car navigation
- No account required for basic use
Disadvantages:
- Live arrivals are thinner than Citymapper
- Interface feels older
- Public transport coverage is broader but shallower
Pricing: Free.
Bottom line: Pick HERE WeGo if you cross borders, lose signal often, and want free country-sized offline maps with transit.
6. Mapy.com — urban transit and outdoor in one
Mapy.com is the Czech-built offline map app that covers urban transit alongside hiking, cycling, and ski trails. Public transport routing is strongest in central Europe. The whole world downloads offline, terrain detail is excellent, and saved POIs sync across devices.
Mapy.com vs Citymapper outside central Europe is more limited; transit data is thinner. Inside the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, and surrounding countries, Mapy.com beats most Citymapper-style apps on terrain context plus city transit in one search.
Advantages:
- Worldwide offline downloads
- Strong central European transit coverage
- Hiking, cycling, ski, and water trails
- Free with no ads
Disadvantages:
- Transit coverage thins outside central Europe
- Slightly outdoor-leaning UI for urban use
- Smaller live-arrivals dataset
Pricing: Free.
Bottom line: Pick Mapy.com if you mix urban journeys with outdoor trips in central Europe.
7. Trainline — planner that also books the ticket
Trainline covers UK and continental European rail with live timetables, disruption alerts, and ticket booking. For journeys that include a long-distance rail leg, Citymapper hands you off to Trainline anyway. Buying the ticket inside Trainline lets you store it in the app, change it later, and check seat reservations.
Trainline vs Citymapper is a planner-versus-booker comparison. Citymapper plans the door-to-door journey; Trainline books the ticket. Many UK riders use both.
Advantages:
- UK and EU rail bookings in one app
- Live timetables and disruption alerts
- Mobile tickets stored in the app
- SplitSave on UK Advance fares
Disadvantages:
- Booking fees and Trainline+ subscription pushes
- Not a multimodal urban planner like Citymapper
- Limited bus and tube data outside major networks
Pricing: Free with booking fees on tickets. Trainline+ subscription available.
Bottom line: Pick Trainline alongside Citymapper or Google Maps when your journey includes a UK or EU rail leg you need to book.
How to choose
Pick Google Maps for the broadest global default. The transit feature has caught up with Citymapper in most cities.
Pick Moovit when you travel between mid-size cities Citymapper has not mapped. The catalogue is the largest available.
Pick Transit for North American or major European cities where the crowdsourced live arrivals beat the official feed.
Pick TfL Go for any London-based travel; pair it with Trainline for trips that leave the capital.
Pick HERE WeGo for border crossings and offline country maps.
Pick Mapy.com for central Europe trips that mix urban transit with hiking.
Pick Trainline alongside whichever planner you use to book the actual rail ticket.
Stay on Citymapper if you live in London, New York, or Paris and have already invested in Citymapper Club. The rail-specific UI and the multi-mode comparison view are still the densest available.
FAQ
What is the best free Citymapper alternative?
Google Maps and Moovit are the strongest free picks. Google Maps wins on global coverage and a familiar interface; Moovit wins on the sheer number of cities and route data points. Transit is the best free pick for North American commuting.
Does Google Maps have everything Citymapper has?
Almost. Google Maps covers transit, walking, cycling, and driving in nearly every city Citymapper supports. The two main gaps versus Citymapper are the carriage-level Tube data in London and the dense bike and scooter integration in select cities.
Which Citymapper alternative works offline?
HERE WeGo and Mapy.com offer free worldwide offline downloads. Moovit Premium adds offline transit. Citymapper Club has offline mode in select cities. Most other apps need a connection for live arrivals.
Is Moovit better than Citymapper?
Moovit covers more cities but goes shallower per city. Citymapper covers fewer cities but goes deeper, with carriage-level Tube data, weather warnings tuned to commute, and dense bike-share integration. The right pick depends on whether you want breadth or depth.
What do Londoners use instead of Citymapper?
Most Londoners pair TfL Go for live status and contactless with Google Maps or Citymapper for journey planning. TfL Go is the official source; Citymapper has the denser planner. Trainline handles trips out of London.
Does Citymapper work in small UK cities?
Coverage is limited outside London, Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham, Edinburgh, and a handful of metros. For smaller cities, Moovit or Google Maps usually has the timetable Citymapper does not.