Map Pack Radius Explained
Your business does not appear in the Map Pack everywhere in your city. It appears within a radius — and most businesses have a smaller radius than they think.
Why your Map Pack position is not what you think
Most business owners check their Google Map Pack position once: they go to their city, search their keyword, and see where they appear. Position 2. Not bad.
What they do not realize is that this result was recorded from their specific location. If their customer is three miles away and searches the same keyword, the business might not appear at all.
This is the Map Pack radius problem. Your listing does not broadcast uniformly across your city. It appears within a geographic coverage zone that Google determines based on your proximity and engagement signals. That zone is your Map Pack radius.
How Google draws your radius
Google does not explicitly define or publish a “radius” for each listing. What actually happens is that Google scores your listing against the searcher’s location for every search. The closer the searcher is to your location, the stronger your proximity score. The more engagement signals you have accumulated from nearby coordinates, the further out that advantage extends.
The practical result looks like a radius — your listing reliably appears within a certain distance and stops appearing beyond that distance. The exact shape is not a perfect circle (population density, street geography, and competitor locations create irregular edges), but the radius approximation is useful for measurement and planning.
Your Map Pack radius, measured from real devices
The math behind why radius matters
The area covered by a circle grows with the square of the radius. This is not just a geometry fact — it has direct implications for how many potential customers can find you.
| Radius | Coverage area | vs 0.5 mi |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5 mi | 0.8 sq mi | 1x (baseline) |
| 1.0 mi | 3.1 sq mi | 4x |
| 2.0 mi | 12.6 sq mi | 16x |
| 3.0 mi | 28.3 sq mi | 36x |
A business expanding from a 0.5-mile radius to a 2-mile radius does not reach 4x more potential customers. It reaches 16x more. In a dense urban market, the difference between a 0.5-mile radius and a 3-mile radius can mean the difference between reaching 5,000 potential customers and 180,000.
What determines your current radius
Your current Map Pack radius is a function of the engagement signal density your listing has accumulated, weighted by geographic origin. Three factors drive it:
- Business age and history — An older business that has served customers for years has more accumulated signals than a new one. Every real customer interaction (call, visit, review) contributes to signal density.
- Engagement signal volume — Total clicks, calls, and direction requests. More signals = stronger prominence score = larger radius.
- Geographic distribution of signals — Signals from users at different distances from your location. A cluster of signals from users 0.5 miles away only expands your radius to ~0.5 miles. You need signals from users at 1, 2, 3 miles to expand your radius to those distances.
How to measure your actual radius
Most rank tracking tools give you a single position — they check from one location or via an API proxy. This is misleading because it does not reflect the geographic variation in your ranking.
Accurate radius measurement requires running the same query from multiple coordinate points around your business location. For example:
- Check your ranking from 0.25 miles north, south, east, west
- Check from 0.5 miles in 8 compass directions
- Check from 1 mile in 8 compass directions
- Check from 2 miles in 8 compass directions
The results create a heat map. Where you appear in position 1-3, you have coverage. Where you drop out or appear in position 4+, your radius ends. This is the actual picture of your Map Pack radius.
MapPack measures your radius using real consumer devices at real coordinates — not proxies or API simulations. This is the only way to get an accurate reading.
How to expand your radius
Radius expansion requires accumulating engagement signals from users at the distances you want to cover. There are two paths:
Organic expansion happens as you serve more customers who are geographically distributed around your location. As more people 2 miles away call you, visit you, and leave reviews, your radius expands to 2 miles. In a growing business in a non-competitive market, this can happen naturally over 1-3 years.
Accelerated expansion is what MapPack does. Rather than waiting for organic customers to accumulate from target coordinates, we deploy real consumer devices at those coordinates to generate the same proximity and engagement signals. A device at 1.5 miles north of your location searching your keyword and engaging with your listing is, from Google’s perspective, identical to a real potential customer doing the same thing.
We target the specific coordinate bands where your radius needs to expand, concentrate signal generation there over 14-45 days, and measure the result with the same real-device methodology. The radius expands. We measure it. You see the result.
Find out your current Map Pack radius
We measure from real devices across 20+ coordinates. You get a radius map showing exactly where your listing appears and where it does not.
Get my free radius report