Apple Maps is about to get its own ad business — and if you run a café, salon, or neighborhood store, your next customer might actually find you through a sponsored pin on their iPhone. Apple is rolling out ads inside Apple Maps in the US and Canada this summer, with paid placements appearing at the top of search results and in a new “Suggested Places” section.
Here’s how it’ll work in practice: when someone searches for “sushi,” “coffee,” or “hardware store” in Apple Maps, businesses will be able to pay to show up above the usual organic results. This system is expected to run a lot like Google Maps and Apple’s own App Store Search Ads, where retailers and brands bid on keywords and the most relevant sponsored listing appears first. Apple is framing this as a way for companies to reach people at the exact moment they’re ready to navigate somewhere, which is prime real estate for local advertising.
Ads won’t just live in search. Apple is also adding a “Suggested Places” list that surfaces recommendations based on what’s trending nearby, users’ recent searches, and other on-device signals. Paid placements can show up in that feed too, but Apple says they’ll be clearly labeled as ads so they don’t blend in with organic suggestions. The company is leaning hard on its privacy image: it says Maps ads are processed using on-device data, are not tied to a user’s Apple Account, and that it doesn’t share user data with third parties for these campaigns.
For businesses, all of this plugs into a new umbrella service called Apple Business, which launches April 14 as a free all‑in‑one platform for managing devices and customer-facing tools. Apple Business replaces Apple Business Connect, Business Essentials, and Business Manager, and it becomes the place where retailers set up their brand profile, manage how they appear on Apple Maps place cards, and buy local ad placements. From the same dashboard, companies can handle things like business email, cloud storage, device security, and even tap‑to‑pay branding on iPhone, underscoring how tightly Apple is trying to bundle services around its hardware.
Strategically, Maps ads are another step in Apple’s push to grow its services revenue by monetizing the apps people already use every day. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has described the move as a significant expansion of Apple’s advertising ambitions, with search ads in Maps expected to roll out broadly starting this summer after being announced as early as this month. For Apple, Maps becomes more than just a navigation tool; it’s a local discovery engine that it can finally charge businesses to appear in.
For users, this will feel familiar if you’ve used Google Maps lately: you’ll still see regular nearby results, but some will be labeled as sponsored, sitting at the top of the list or in that new suggestions rail. The big question is how aggressive Apple gets with the placement and volume of these ads — push too hard and Maps starts to feel cluttered, keep it light and Apple gets a new revenue stream without annoying iPhone owners who are used to Apple positioning itself as the privacy‑first alternative to its ad-heavy rivals.
For small businesses, though, Apple Maps ads could quietly become the new battleground for local SEO budgets that today mostly go to Google. If you already rely on iPhone users finding you through “near me” searches, paying to sit on top of those results — right inside the default maps app on hundreds of millions of devices — might be hard to ignore once this launches later in 2026.
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