I downloaded 14 hiking and outdoor apps, loaded them onto two phones, and hit trails across three countries. Most of them wasted our time.
The real problem is not finding an app. The problem is finding the right combination. Most hikers download AllTrails, use 10% of it, and never realize a second app would solve every frustration they have.
This guide breaks down the best outdoor activity apps for hikers by what they actually do well. I name winners for trail discovery, GPS navigation, fitness tracking, and safety — then show you exactly which apps to stack together.
QUICK ANSWER: AllTrails (free tier) handles trail discovery and community reviews for most day hikers. Add Gaia GPS for serious backcountry navigation with offline topo maps. Komoot wins for European trails and turn-by-turn voice guidance. Most hikers need exactly two apps — one for planning, one for navigating. Download both before your next hike.
How I Tested These Hiking Apps
I evaluated outdoor apps the way hikers actually use them — not in a lab.
- Check offline map reliability in areas with zero cell signal
- Use each app on the same trail to compare GPS accuracy
- Test route planning on both desktop and mobile
- Evaluate free vs paid features to determine real value
- Compare community trail data across three continents
Every app was tested on both iOS and Android. I prioritized features that matter on the trail — not marketing bullet points. Battery drain, map readability in direct sunlight, and offline functionality received the most weight.
Best Apps for Trail Discovery and Route Planning
This is where most hikers start. These apps help you find trails, read reviews, and plan your route before you leave home.
- Pick AllTrails for the largest US trail database and community reviews
- Use Komoot for European coverage and voice-guided turn-by-turn navigation
- Check Wikiloc for obscure international trails other apps miss
- Avoid apps that lock basic trail search behind a paywall
- Skip any app without recent user reviews — stale data gets you lost
Trail discovery apps answer one question first: where should you hike today? The best ones answer it within 30 seconds.
AllTrails
AllTrails dominates trail discovery. The app has over 400,000 trails and more than 80 million registered users worldwide.
- Search trails by location, distance, difficulty, and dog-friendliness
- Read recent community reviews with photos and condition reports
- Download offline maps with the Plus subscription ($35.99/year)
- Use off-trail alerts that vibrate when you wander from the path
- Access the new Peak tier ($79.99/year) for AI-built custom routes
The free tier covers casual day hikers comfortably. You get trail search, reviews, photos, and basic GPS tracking without paying anything. However, offline maps require Plus. If you hike in areas with spotty cell service, the paid tier is worth every dollar.
AllTrails recently added Trail Conditions forecasts. These show temperature, precipitation, and snow depth for upcoming hikes. The Peak tier also includes an Outdoor Lens for identifying plants on the trail.
Komoot
Komoot is the strongest option for hikers who travel internationally. The app excels at route planning with voice navigation.
- Get turn-by-turn voice guidance on hiking trails — not just roads
- Choose your fitness level and let the app plot a matching route
- Buy worldwide access for a one-time payment (roughly $35)
- Download routes for offline use with any paid plan
- Connect with a global community for local trail recommendations
Komoot calculates surface type, elevation, and difficulty automatically. Because of this, it is especially useful for planning unfamiliar routes in new countries. The one-time pricing model also beats most subscription-based competitors.
The app supports hiking, cycling, trail running, and mountain biking. Therefore, adventure travelers who switch between activities get more value from a single purchase.
Wikiloc
Wikiloc covers trails that AllTrails and Komoot miss entirely. The app has over 74 million user-generated tracks worldwide.
- Search for trails in regions with limited AllTrails coverage
- Filter by activity type including hiking, kayaking, and snowshoeing
- Upload your own GPS tracks to share with the community
- Use offline maps with the premium subscription
However, the sheer volume of user-generated content means quality varies. Some tracks are duplicates. Others follow unreliable routes. Always cross-reference Wikiloc tracks with a topo map before heading out.
Best Hiking GPS and Navigation Apps

Trail discovery gets you to the trailhead. Navigation apps keep you alive after that. These apps prioritize offline topo maps, GPS accuracy, and backcountry reliability.
- Pick Gaia GPS for serious off-trail navigation and custom routes
- Use Outdooractive for real-time location sharing with safety contacts
- Choose FarOut for long-distance thru-hiking on established trails
- Avoid relying on a single navigation app — carry a backup
- Skip apps that require constant cell service for map access
Navigation apps matter most when your phone is the only tool between you and getting lost. Battery efficiency and offline reliability are non-negotiable.
Gaia GPS
Gaia GPS is the go-to navigation app for backcountry hikers who leave marked trails behind. The app provides access to specialized topo maps that AllTrails cannot match.
- Access USGS topo maps, satellite imagery, and NatGeo trail maps
- Download offline maps for entire regions before remote trips
- Import custom routes from CalTopo or other planning tools
- Track distance, elevation, pace, and route progress in real time
Gaia was acquired by Outside, Inc. As a result, subscription costs have increased. The premium tier runs approximately $40 per year. Some users dislike the newer social features. Despite this, the mapping depth remains unmatched for backcountry navigation.
For adventure travelers heading into remote terrain — think Montenegro’s Durmitor range or Virginia’s Great Channels — Gaia provides the detail that simpler apps lack.
Outdooractive
Outdooractive combines route planning with real-time safety features. The app is especially popular across Europe.
- Use BuddyBeacon to share your live location with family or friends
- Access integrated weather forecasts for route-specific conditions
- Download offline maps with the Pro subscription
- Plan routes across hiking, cycling, and skiing activities
The BuddyBeacon feature stands out for solo hikers. Assign a safety contact who can track your progress in real time. This is particularly valuable on remote trails where cell service drops unexpectedly.
Additionally, Outdooractive integrates OS mapping for UK hikers. This makes it a strong choice for anyone splitting time between European and UK trails.
FarOut
FarOut is purpose-built for thru-hikers tackling long-distance trails. The app functions like a GPS-enabled guidebook.
- Access waypoint-based navigation for major trails like the AT and PCT
- See exact distances to water sources, campsites, and resupply points
- Read crowdsourced comments on waypoint conditions
- Use offline maps for multi-day backcountry sections
FarOut is overkill for casual day hikes. However, for multi-day backpacking trips on established long trails, no other app comes close. The waypoint detail — including current water source status — is information you cannot get from AllTrails or Gaia.
Best Apps for Trail Running and Fitness Tracking
Some hikers want more than directions. They want data. These apps track performance, log activities, and connect you with a fitness-focused community.
- Pick Strava for detailed pace, elevation, and segment tracking
- Use Komoot’s trail running mode for voice-guided running routes
- Avoid using fitness apps as your primary navigation tool
- Check that your app syncs with your GPS watch or wearable
Fitness apps complement navigation apps. They do not replace them. Use one for tracking, another for finding your way home.
Strava
Strava is the most popular fitness tracking app among trail runners and adventure athletes. The app turns every hike into trackable data.
- Record distance, elevation gain, pace, and moving time
- Compare your efforts on popular segments with other users
- Sync activities with Garmin, Suunto, Apple Watch, and other devices
- Share routes and connect with a massive global community
Strava works best as a companion to a dedicated hiking app. Use AllTrails or Komoot to plan and navigate. Then use Strava to record your stats and track improvement over time.
The free tier covers basic tracking. Strava Summit (paid) adds route planning, live segments, and training analysis.
Komoot (Trail Running Mode)
Komoot doubles as a solid trail running app. The same voice navigation that helps hikers also works beautifully at running pace.
- Get audio turn-by-turn cues so you never check your phone mid-run
- Choose surface type preferences for softer, runnable trails
- Track running-specific stats alongside hiking activities
- Plan loop routes automatically from any starting point
Because Komoot already excels at route planning, trail runners avoid needing a separate discovery app. One purchase covers both hiking and running.
Best Nature and Safety Apps for Hikers
The best outdoor apps go beyond navigation. These tools help you identify wildlife, book campsites, and stay safe in the backcountry.
- Pick iNaturalist for identifying plants, birds, and wildlife on trail
- Use Cairn for cell coverage maps and emergency check-ins
- Check Recreation.gov for campsite reservations at federal lands
- Avoid relying on any single app for emergency communication
- Skip plant identification apps that lack scientific verification
Safety apps work best as a third layer. Navigation first, fitness second, safety and nature third.
iNaturalist
iNaturalist turns every hike into a citizen science expedition. The app identifies plants and animals using photo recognition.
- Snap a photo of an unknown plant and get instant identification
- Contribute observations to global biodiversity databases
- Connect with scientists and naturalists worldwide
- Access identification data offline in previously visited areas
iNaturalist is developed by the National Geographic Society and the California Academy of Sciences. The data quality is significantly higher than casual plant ID apps. For hikers who want to learn what surrounds them on the trail, this app is essential.
Cairn
Cairn solves a problem every hiker worries about — what happens if something goes wrong in an area with no cell service?
- Check cell coverage maps for your planned route before hiking
- Set overdue alerts that notify emergency contacts automatically
- Log your hiking plan and expected return time
- Access coverage data from multiple carriers on one map
Cairn is a safety-first app. It does not replace navigation or trail discovery. However, pairing Cairn with AllTrails or Gaia adds a meaningful safety layer, especially for solo hikers on remote trails.
Recreation.gov
Recreation.gov is the official booking platform for US federal recreation lands. The app covers over 100,000 locations.
- Reserve campsites at national parks and federal recreation areas
- Buy passes and enter lotteries for high-demand experiences
- Use scan-and-pay at participating campgrounds for quick check-in
- Review location details and access maps before your trip
For hikers planning overnight trips at popular US destinations, Recreation.gov handles the logistics that trail apps ignore. Pair it with AllTrails for trail planning and you cover both the hiking and camping sides of any trip.
AllTrails vs Komoot vs Gaia GPS: Which One Should You Pick?
| Feature | AllTrails | Komoot | Gaia GPS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best For | Trail discovery & reviews | Route planning & voice nav | Backcountry topo navigation |
| Free Tier | Yes — trail search, reviews, basic GPS | Yes — single region included | Yes — basic maps only |
| Paid Price | Plus: $35.99/yr · Peak: $79.99/yr | ~$35 one-time (worldwide) | ~$40/yr (premium) |
| Offline Maps | Plus & Peak only | Yes (paid plans) | Yes (premium) |
| Voice Navigation | No | Yes — turn-by-turn | No |
| Topo Map Depth | Basic | Moderate | Advanced (USGS, NatGeo, satellite) |
| Off-Trail Alerts | Yes (Plus & Peak) | Yes | No |
| Custom Route Building | Peak only (AI-powered) | Yes (all plans) | Yes (premium) |
| Community Size | 80M+ users | Large (strongest in Europe) | Smaller, specialist |
| Multi-Sport Support | Hiking, biking, running | Hiking, biking, running, skiing | Hiking, biking, skiing, hunting |
| Best Region | USA | Europe & worldwide | USA backcountry |
| Safety / Live Sharing | Lifeline (Plus & Peak) | No built-in | No built-in |
These three apps dominate the hiking app conversation. Each wins in a different scenario.
- Choose AllTrails for US trail discovery, community reviews, and casual day hiking
- Choose Komoot for international travel, voice navigation, and one-time pricing
- Choose Gaia GPS for backcountry navigation, custom routes, and topo map depth
- Use AllTrails + Gaia together for the strongest US hiking setup
- Use Komoot + Gaia together for international backcountry adventures
AllTrails has the largest community. Komoot has the best routing engine. Gaia has the deepest maps. No single app wins everything.
Most experienced hikers settle on two apps. A discovery app (AllTrails or Komoot) paired with a navigation app (Gaia GPS) covers nearly every scenario from casual waterfall hikes to multi-day wilderness traverses.
How to Stack Apps by Adventure Type
| Adventure Type | Primary App | Secondary App | Optional Add-On | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casual Day Hikes (US) | AllTrails (free) | Cairn | iNaturalist | Free |
| Serious Day Hikes (International) | Komoot | iNaturalist | Wikiloc | ~$35 one-time |
| Multi-Day Backpacking (US Long Trails) | FarOut | Gaia GPS | Cairn | ~$70–$100/yr |
| Backcountry / Off-Trail | Gaia GPS | Cairn | CalTopo (desktop) | ~$40/yr |
| Trail Running | Strava | Komoot | AllTrails (free) | Free – $35 one-time |
| Adventure Travel (Multi-Activity) | AllTrails | Komoot | Recreation.gov | ~$35 one-time |
Different adventures demand different app combinations. Here is what I recommend based on how you actually hike.
Casual Day Hikes (US): AllTrails free tier + Cairn. Find trails with reviews. Stay safe with cell coverage maps. Total cost: free.
Serious Day Hikes (International): Komoot + iNaturalist. Voice navigation on unfamiliar trails. Identify local flora along the way. Total cost: roughly $35 one-time.
Multi-Day Backpacking (US Long Trails): FarOut + Gaia GPS + Cairn. Waypoint navigation for resupply planning. Topo maps for off-trail sections. Safety alerts for solo stretches.
Trail Running: Strava + Komoot. Record performance data with Strava. Plan runnable routes with Komoot’s surface-type filters.
Adventure Travel (Multiple Activities): AllTrails + Komoot + Recreation.gov. Trail discovery, multi-sport routing, and campsite booking all in one phone.
Start with one app. Add a second when the first one frustrates you. That frustration point tells you exactly which gap to fill.
The Verdict
I have tested hiking apps across day hikes, multi-day backpacking trips, and international trail adventures. The answer is never one app. It is always two.
AllTrails handles discovery and community data better than anything else on the market. Pair it with Gaia GPS for backcountry depth. Or pair Komoot with Gaia for international adventures. Then add Cairn if you hike solo.
The best outdoor activity apps for hikers are the ones that match your actual adventure style. Start with the free tiers. Upgrade only when a missing feature costs you time or safety on the trail. Your phone is already the most versatile piece of hiking gear you carry — these apps make sure it earns its weight.
