Professional map layers built for the way real estate actually works — whether you sell homes, lease shopping centers, or plan what comes next.
Every residential layer is built around a question real buyers and agents ask every day — school zones, neighborhoods, shelters, precincts. One click in Google Earth, and the answer is on the map.
“Where will my child attend school?”
Find the elementary, middle, and high school attendance zones — and see every neighborhood that feeds into those schools.
“How do I get to know my area?”
Single-family communities, condos, townhomes, apartments, country clubs, and 55+ — instantly viewable. Perfect for listing presentations and research: show clients you know the area better than anyone.
“Can I only see the neighborhoods that fit?”
Unlike the MLS or Zillow, eliminate every neighborhood that doesn't fit — school zone, townhomes, country clubs, 55+ — instantly with one click.
“Which city is this property actually in?”
See exactly where every city begins and ends — including unincorporated areas. A mailing address doesn't always match the real jurisdiction, taxes, or services.
“Where do I go in an emergency?”
Every emergency shelter plus evacuation-zone boundaries — so you know whether a property has to evacuate, and where to go if it does.
“Who are my government representatives?”
One click shows the Congressional, State House, and State Senate districts — and the people who hold those seats.
“Where do I go to vote?”
Every voter precinct with its polling location. Find your neighborhood on the map and your polling place is one click away.
“Where are the bus stops near me?”
Every stop with its exact location — plus whether it's sheltered, has a bench, and has a bike rack.
“Does this home have to evacuate?”
Every evacuation zone drawn right on the map. Know a property's zone before the storm ever forms — and when that zone gets the call to leave.
VMAP covers most commercial real estate properties — color-coded by property type so you can read a market at a glance.
Most are highlighted and some have site plans, anchor tenants and their square footages — color-coded by property type.
Major intersections, with north, south, east, and west counts — including annual counts going back twenty years.
Every district links to its municode zoning code — click a parcel, click the link, read the ordinance.
See incentive districts layered right over the parcels — federal Opportunity Zones, HUD Qualified Census Tracts, Difficult Development Areas, and LIHTC properties, each a click away from its source data.
Pick your state and county on the interactive map — every layer is delivered as a Google Earth–ready KMZ.
Browse the Map →