Fast setup for business websites: markers, styles, blocks, shortcodes, and import tools.
Distance search, filters, hours, multi-language, bulk CSV uploads — built for multi-location brands.
Web-app mapping: tiles, geocoding, routing, places, and cost control (Google alternatives).
Replace the #AFF links with your affiliate links when you join programs. Use this as your “huge website” — it’s all in one file.
| Tool | Category | Best for | Pricing | Affiliate | Link |
|---|
Agencies and multi-location businesses pay the most because they need reliable locators and support. WordPress users buy in higher volume, but at lower price.
If your goal is affiliate money fast: publish “best store locator” + “best WordPress maps plugin” pages first.
Best for businesses who want an easy map on their site. If you build this niche, you’ll target keywords like “best WordPress maps plugin”, “store locator plugin”, “OpenStreetMap WordPress”, and “Google Maps API cost”.
| Plugin | Best for | Notes | Link |
|---|
Highest buyer intent. People search this when they are ready to purchase. This is where affiliate earnings usually come from.
| Tool | Best for | Features | Link |
|---|
You cannot resell Google Maps API keys, but you can review tools and recommend them. Many builders look for cheaper alternatives to control costs.
| API | Best for | Notes | Link |
|---|
APIs are usually usage-based. Your content should focus on “cost control”, “limits”, “tile pricing”, “geocoding costs”, and “alternatives”. That’s what people search.
These sections are written so Google can index your site even before you add long blog posts.
Start with the use-case: “find us” map vs store locator vs directory vs web-app API.
For WordPress: pick a plugin with Gutenberg blocks, CSV import, caching support, and clear documentation.
For store locators: ensure distance search, filters, bulk imports, and multi-language support if needed.
For APIs: compare pricing, map styles, coverage, geocoding limits, and routing/traffic features.
Upload this single index.html file into SiteGround public_html.
Delete any old index.php so index.html loads first. Done.
Day 1: Publish this page + disclosure.
Day 2: Add 5 real affiliate links (replace #AFF).
Day 3: Create 2 comparison sections in “Reviews”.
Day 4: Add a “Best store locator” block + recommended pick.
Day 5: Add “Google Maps vs MapTiler vs Mapbox” section.
Day 6: Add 10 FAQs with buyer keywords.
Day 7: Submit to Google Search Console + build 10 backlinks (profiles/mentions).
Copy/paste this section and expand it over time (still one file). Add your screenshots later.
Best for: …
Pros: …
Cons: …
Pricing: …
Setup time: …
Verdict: …
Compare 3 tools and answer: (1) easiest setup, (2) best value, (3) best for agencies, (4) best for performance. Add a table with pricing + features.
Conversion trick: add a “Best pick” label and link it with your affiliate link.
Yes. Businesses need contact maps, store locators, directories, and delivery zones. WordPress is the biggest buyer market.
No. Don’t resell API access or keys. You can build tools that use maps (user provides their key), and you can do reviews/affiliate.
Store locator software pages + comparisons. Those buyers are ready to purchase.
Search this file for #AFF and replace with your real link (Impact / PartnerStack / ShareASale / direct program links).
Add more tools to the tool list below (inside this file), and add more “Reviews” sections. Still one file.
Some links on this website may be affiliate links. If you click and purchase, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. This helps keep the site running. We only list tools we believe are useful for maps, store locators, and mapping projects.
We do not sell or resell Google Maps API access or keys.