
Why people leave Easy Rout Map
- Ad density is high. Banners and interstitials sit on the search, route and street-view screens, and a routine driving session triggers ads multiple times an hour without the paid tier.
- Offline coverage is limited. The app advertises offline maps but the practical download size and coverage area lag behind dedicated offline navigators, which matters in rural Indonesia or in road tunnels with no signal.
- Voice navigation accuracy varies. The turn-by-turn voice handles main roads well but mispronounces local street names in mixed Indonesian-English areas and occasionally drops cues at fast junctions.
- Street view is a wrapper, not a primary source. The 360-degree imagery routes through a third-party tile service and the latest views in fast-changing Indonesian cities can be years out of date.
- Permissions and tracking. The app requests broad location and storage permissions and runs background services that drain battery faster than rivals on the same hardware.
If any of that pushes you to compare, here are 7 navigation app alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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Google Maps if you want the deepest live-traffic, transit and place data on one map.
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Waze if you want crowd-sourced hazard and speed-camera alerts on the route.
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MAPS.ME if you need real offline maps for an entire country at a time.
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HERE WeGo if you want offline navigation plus public transit in one app.
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Magic Earth if you want a privacy-respecting navigator with full offline support.
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Organic Maps if you want a fully open-source navigator with strong cycling and hiking trails.
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OsmAnd if you want the most customisable open-source navigator.
Stay on Easy Rout Map if you want one install that bundles navigation, weather, area calculator, world clock and a level meter alongside the route screen.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Offline | Voice nav | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Google Maps | Live data and POIs | Selected | Yes | 4.5 |
| Waze | Crowd-sourced alerts | No | Yes | 4.7 |
| MAPS.ME | Country-wide offline tiles | Yes | Yes | 4.4 |
| HERE WeGo | Offline plus transit | Yes | Yes | 4.3 |
| Magic Earth | Privacy-first navigation | Yes | Yes | 4.5 |
| Organic Maps | Open-source with trails | Yes | Yes | 4.6 |
| OsmAnd | Customisation depth | Yes | Yes | 4.4 |
1. Google Maps -- the default navigation app

Google Maps is the default for a reason. Live traffic on Indonesian highways is the most accurate of the major maps, the place database covers nearly every business with photos and reviews, and Lite Mode runs on lower-end Androids. Driving, walking, transit and motorbike modes share the same routing engine.
Offline coverage downloads in city-sized tiles and Google account sign-in is required for most features. The privacy footprint is real: location history is on unless explicitly disabled.
Advantages:
- Deepest live-traffic accuracy
- Largest place database with photos
- Driving, walking, transit, motorbike modes
- Lane guidance on major highways
Disadvantages:
- Offline tiles are city-sized
- Google account required for full features
- Location history defaults to on
Pricing: Free, with no upgrade tier.
2. Waze -- the crowd-sourced driver app

Waze is the right pick for a driver who wants the live hazard, accident and speed-camera reports that other Waze drivers contribute in real time. The routing engine reroutes aggressively around traffic on Jakarta’s main corridors, and the speed-limit overlay matches local signage on most roads.
Waze is driver-only, with no transit, walking or motorbike-specific routing. There is no offline mode, which makes a long highway tunnel a blind spot.
Advantages:
- Crowd-sourced hazards and police alerts
- Aggressive rerouting around traffic
- Speed-limit overlay matches local signage
- Trip ETA updates accurately
Disadvantages:
- Driver-only, no walking or transit modes
- No offline mode
- Battery drain higher than rivals
Pricing: Free, with no upgrade tier.
3. MAPS.ME -- the offline-first navigator

MAPS.ME downloads a whole country in a single tile pack and runs without a network connection from then on. For Indonesia that means the whole archipelago in one download, search and routing included. The walking and cycling routes on rural roads come from OpenStreetMap and stay useful where Google Maps thins out.
Live traffic is absent and the place database is shallower than Google Maps. The free tier carries occasional ads that the paid upgrade removes.
Advantages:
- Country-wide offline tile packs
- Search and routing work offline
- OpenStreetMap walking and cycling data
- Lightweight footprint after install
Disadvantages:
- No live traffic
- Place database shallower
- Free tier carries ads
Pricing: Free with ads, paid tier removes ads.
4. HERE WeGo -- the offline-plus-transit hybrid

HERE WeGo pairs country-wide offline download with public-transit routing in major Indonesian cities. Walking, driving, taxi and transit modes share the same route screen, the offline coverage is honest about which features stay live, and the lane guidance on highways is accurate.
The place database is narrower than Google Maps and live traffic in Indonesia is patchy. HERE is strongest as a navigator, not as a place finder.
Advantages:
- Country-wide offline maps
- Transit routing in major cities
- Honest offline feature labelling
- Lane guidance on highways
Disadvantages:
- Place database narrower
- Live traffic patchy in Indonesia
- Smaller community than Google or Waze
Pricing: Free, with no upgrade tier.
5. Magic Earth -- the privacy-respecting choice

Magic Earth is built around a clear privacy stance: no account required, no tracking, no ads. The offline maps cover a whole region in one download, voice navigation handles turn-by-turn cleanly, and the live traffic layer pulls from anonymous community data instead of a user profile.
The place database is shallower than Google Maps and the transit coverage is selected. Magic Earth is a driving and walking navigator first.
Advantages:
- No account, no tracking, no ads
- Country-wide offline maps
- Community-sourced live traffic
- Lightweight footprint
Disadvantages:
- Place database shallower
- Transit coverage selected
- Smaller install base than the leaders
Pricing: Free, with no upgrade tier.
6. Organic Maps -- the open-source navigator

Organic Maps is the fully open-source navigator built on OpenStreetMap data. There is no account, no tracking, no ads, no upsell. The offline download is per-region, the hiking and cycling layer carries the trail networks that mainstream maps miss, and the voice navigation works without any data connection.
The place database is OpenStreetMap-based, which means coverage in Indonesia varies by city. Live traffic is absent and the UI is utilitarian.
Advantages:
- Fully open-source
- No account, no tracking, no ads
- Strong cycling and hiking trail data
- Voice navigation works offline
Disadvantages:
- Place coverage varies by region
- No live traffic
- Utilitarian UI
Pricing: Free and open-source, donation-supported.
7. OsmAnd -- the deeply customisable open-source choice

OsmAnd is the navigator for users who want to control every layer on the map. The downloadable layers cover roads, contours, terrain, hiking trails, public transit, parking and more, and the routing profiles can be tuned per vehicle type. The offline download is per-region and works without a network.
OsmAnd has a learning curve. The settings catalogue is deep, the first-time setup takes longer than the mainstream maps, and the free tier limits the number of downloadable map regions.
Advantages:
- Deep layer customisation
- Per-vehicle routing profiles
- Strong hiking and cycling trail data
- Works fully offline
Disadvantages:
- Learning curve is steep
- Free tier limits map downloads
- UI is dense
Pricing: Free with limited map downloads, OsmAnd Pro unlocks unlimited.