Apple Adds 'GasBuddy' and 'GreatSchools' as New Maps Data Partners [Updated] - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Apple Adds 'GasBuddy' and 'GreatSchools' as New Maps Data Partners [Updated]

maps.jpgApple added several new companies to its Apple Maps Acknowledgements page over the course of the past month, possibly hinting at future plans for improvements to its mapping app. The Acknowledgements page lists all of the sources that provide information to Apple for the Maps app.

New listings include GasBuddy/OpenStore and GreatSchools, two additions that AppleMapsMarketing speculates could lead to Maps upgrades like gas prices on gas station locations and school data for school locations. GasBuddy.com is a site that is designed to highlight local gas prices, helping users find the cheapest gas in any given area. GreatSchools.org is a community-based site that aggregates information about schools, including students enrolled, available programs, ratings, and academic test scores.

Apple has also added Yext to the page, a site that allows businesses to update their locations for multiple online sites at one time, but the company's partnership with Yext was previously known. The National Land Survey of Finland Topographic Database is also new, likely adding new maps data for the country.

Though Apple's acknowledgements page lists GasBuddy and GreatSchools, the above-mentioned data is not yet showing up in the Maps app, and it is unknown exactly when and if Apple will add gas price and school information to Maps. It's entirely possible that the company's partnerships with GasBuddy and GreatSchools have been established to bolster existing data on the locations of gas stations and schools.

Since Maps' rocky debut in 2012, Apple has made continued efforts to improve the app by hiring mapping experts around the world, fixing user-reported errors, and boosting points of interest through its data partners. Most recently, Apple added 10 new data sources to Maps, sometime around November of 2014.

Apple is rumored to be working on some major Maps improvements like transit directions and indoor mapping information, but the launch of these features seems to have been pushed back due to internal organizational issues. It is not known when Maps might see its next major update, but because there seems to be no sign of Maps upgrades in iOS 8.2 and iOS 8.3, it's possible Apple is saving the feature for iOS 9.

Update: iDownloadBlog spoke with a GasBuddy representative and learned that GasBuddy is not supplying Apple with gas prices. Instead, the company is sharing station information like brand name and address.

Popular Stories

Apple Maps General

Apple Maps Flyover Gets a Visual Upgrade in iOS 27

Monday June 8, 2026 4:29 pm PDT by
Apple Maps is getting a visual update in iOS 27, with Apple planning to introduce new aerial imagery that's combined with Visual Intelligence models. Apple said everything will have sharper detail, from the "shapes of individual trees to the way light reflects off the glass of skyscrapers." Flyover is an Apple Maps view that lets users see more than 350 cities in 3D with detailed...
Apple Says iOS 27 Adds These 12 New Features to Your iPhone Feature

Apple Says iOS 27 Adds These 12 New Features to Your iPhone

Tuesday June 9, 2026 9:47 am PDT by
iOS 27's key new feature is a more intelligent and personal version of Siri, but the changes go well beyond that. In a press release, Apple outlined additional enhancements coming across Apple Maps, Find My, Apple Wallet, Apple Music, and more. Apple Maps has gained an enhanced Flyover experience powered by AI, enabling you to view aerial imagery in "stunning detail" for select cities. In ...
liquid glass app icon

Apple Maps to Get These 10 New Features in iOS 27

Thursday June 11, 2026 5:45 am PDT by
Apple Maps is getting a range of new features in iOS 27, headlined by an upgraded Flyover experience that uses AI to improve the realism and detail of its aerial imagery. Flyover is a longstanding feature of Apple Maps and lets users explore more than 350 cities in 3D with detailed landmarks, roads, parks, and buildings. Apple described the enhanced Flyover in iOS 27 as combining aerial...

Top Rated Comments

148 months ago
I've long thought Apple should buy GasBuddy and integrate it with Maps.

"Hey Siri, where's the cheapest gas near here"
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
148 months ago
Fantastic, now I can drive 10 miles out of my way to save 47 cents on a tank of gas!

Sorry, I guess I don't get GasBuddy. The stations near me are always within a few cents of each other. I get gas where it's convenient, not where it's cheapest.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
148 months ago
This just underscores how slow Apple is with everything. I'm still amazed on people still trying to use Apple Maps.

Siri is a complete waste of time such that I turned it off.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
bpeeps Avatar
148 months ago
Gas Buddy is my savior. That and Waze. Nothing beats Waze. Sorry Apple & Google Maps.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
148 months ago
As a frequent maps user I can say the maps app has jumped tremendously in reliability over the last year. Google still beats them on POI and search functions, but other than that I pretty much use Apple maps daily now. Looking forward to the updates.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
nagromme Avatar
148 months ago
people still use apple maps these days
Apple Maps usage has been rising for two years.

It has always been more accurate for me (US city, with Flyover) than Google Maps. Google would regularly send me to a restaurant/etc. blocks away from the actual location.

Apple Maps has also always been poorer than Google at interpreting a search for "amost the right thing." Google knows what I mean anyway! Apple needs to catch up. (Same applies to App Store and iTunes searches.)

That's not enough for me to put up with Google Maps' failings. But I don't go around advising people to stay away from Google if it's what works for them. It's nice having two good options (and more).

People have always had problems with Google map errors. Always will. Same with Apple, Waze, etc. But the media didn't tell us to pay attention to Google's errors. So we shrugged them off: not a perfect service, but still awesomely useful!

But with an Apple logo on the SAME kinds of little errors, it was made out to be the end of the world :) People noticed when the media raised a constant hue and cry, and every Apple error they saw, they remembered and did not shrug off.

See: Confirmation Bias
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)