Why many users keep both Google Maps and Waze open

For years, Google Maps was the only navigation app many drivers needed—until real-time traffic updates and community-driven alerts changed the game. Today, savvy commuters often run both Google Maps and Waze side by side, each filling a gap the other can’t.
Two apps, two strengths
Google Maps excels at broad route planning, offering detailed street views, public transit schedules, and offline maps for long trips. Waze, on the other hand, thrives on crowdsourced data: its alerts for speed traps, road hazards, and police presence arrive faster than official traffic feeds. Drivers who juggle both often rely on Google Maps for the big picture and Waze for last-minute detours.
When precision matters most
Urban commuters benefit from Waze’s hyper-local updates during rush hour, while travelers navigating unfamiliar highways prefer Google Maps’ reliable lane guidance and rest-stop recommendations. The best choice depends on the moment—whether you’re racing against the clock or mapping out a day-long journey. In short, keeping both apps handy isn’t redundancy; it’s strategy.
Source: XDA Developers. AI-assisted editorial synthesis — TechnoExpress.

