Google Maps has a big problem, and it's getting worse in 2026
by Dhruv Bhutani · Android PoliceI use Google Maps every single day, and most of the time I open it for the same basic reasons everyone else does.
I need to find a café to work from, a pharmacy that's open late at night, or a gas station en route. Once in a while, I might use it to find a coffee shop around me.
It's supposed to be the fastest way to find real-world places around you. This is why Google Maps' biggest problems have become so frustrating for me in 2026.
Google keeps adding to the Google Maps experience, but not always in the best way. Especially now that it has Gemini-powered search that lets you ask natural-language questions instead of typing awkward keywords.
On paper, I can search for a quiet coffee shop near me with parking, and it should find intent-based results. That part is genuinely helpful. But better search doesn't fix bad search results.
The real issue I've been facing is that the core experience is cluttered with low-quality business listings, sponsored placements, fake reviews, and unreliable local information.
The app is continuously getting better at helping me ask questions while getting worse at making me trust that those answers are what I want.
That is a much bigger problem because Google Maps isn't just a navigation app anymore. It's also where you make real-world decisions about where you're going to go next.
Google Maps isn't my navigator anymore, but I still can't remove it
Google Maps isn't my navigator anymore, and that's the point
Posts By Ben Khalesi
Local discovery feels more like advertising
Finding the best places to eat shouldn't mean wading through ads
The first, and perhaps the biggest issue, that I've faced with Google Maps is how difficult local discovery has become.
Searching for something as basic as a brunch spot or a repair technician gives you results that are rarely what you're looking for.
Promoted businesses appear top-and-center with sponsored pins sitting directly on the map.
The organic listings are mixed closely with ads that, on the one hand, you're not even sure what's legit and what's paid for, and on the other hand, it feels like local real-world discovery instead of local discovery.
Look, I get why this happens. Google is in the business of advertising, and Maps is easily one of the most valuable places to sell ads and visibility.
Businesses benefit the most from such intentional searches and, for many categories, such as restaurants, salons, pharmacies, clinics, and service-based businesses, this traffic can be a significant part of the marketing pipeline.
But the problem is that when I'm trying to make a quick decision, I do not want to separate the best result from the best advertiser.
If I am outdoors looking for a place to eat or trying to get my car fixed, I want results that I can trust, ranked by reviews and proximity.
I do not want to spend time figuring out whether a listing is genuinely useful or being pushed towards me because of ad targeting.
It's had a direct impact on how I use the Maps app. I now check reviews more carefully. I look up photos and often even cross-check with other apps before making a decision.
That's needless friction, but this is what the experience has devolved to.
Unreliable listings are breaking consumer trust
Urgent searches leave no room for bad information
However, that's just one part of the problem. The other big one is that the listings themselves are becoming unreliable.
I still run into places with the wrong time, duplicate profiles, inaccurate locations, or businesses that are clearly keyword stuffing.
Reviews are also no longer entirely trustworthy. Less than reputable businesses have leaned into buying hundreds of perfect ratings to create the illusion of an experience that is disjointed from the actual experience. This problem particularly plagues service-oriented businesses.
I know a lot of this is down to individual businesses, but it is up to Google to take corrective measures. Be it de-ranking listings, gaming the system, or aggressively clamping down on gaming of reviews.
When you are searching for plumbers, movers, locksmiths, or repair technicians, you aren't casually searching for a café where a bad café could really just mean a bad coffee and not much more.
Subscribe to our newsletter for trustworthy local tech
Get the newsletter for clear, case-driven coverage of local discovery, Google Maps' trust problems, and practical advice for spotting reliable listings. Subscribing gives focused analysis and real-world examples to help you make better local decisions.
Get Updates
By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.
In an urgent situation, a poor listing can lead to bigger consequences, and that's when you start losing trust in the system.
Google has previously said that it removes millions of fake reviews and fake business profiles every year and that it is leveraging Gemini AI-based systems to detect fraud and suspicious edits.
That tells you that the company is aware of the gravity of the situation. But the efforts don't reflect the reality of just how broken the system already is, and just how much still needs to be fixed.
Trust matters more than convenience
For most people, Maps is the first step before making a purchase, stepping out for a meal, or going for a service. It is supposed to help ease that decision-making process.
Google Reviews and business profiles are supposed to be the gold standard since they are expected to be crowdsourced data.
But right now, that data is becoming corrupted, whether through spam or the overwhelming prioritization of ads and sponsored data.
This creates a poor experience for users, and even for honest businesses trying to compete on a level playing field.
I still rely on Google Maps because the data set continues to be the widest. But I hope Google steps up its efforts to fix these issues before I, and many others, start looking at alternatives to Google Maps.
Google Maps
Google LLC
TRAVEL & LOCAL
Price: Free
3.2
Download