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Beginner’s guide to CalTopo: plan hikes, use offline maps, sync to your phone, and track routes with this powerful mapping tool. Gear I'm Using Now: inReach: https://hkgy.co/inreach Hiking App: https://hkgy.co/app Watch: https://hkgy.co/watch Shoes: https://hkgy.co/shoes Pack: https://hkgy.co/backpack Rescue Insurance: https://hkgy.co/insurance Full Hiking Gear List (What I Use Now - Tested & Not Sponsored): https://hikingguy.com/gear Links: https://caltopo.com Website: https://hikingguy.com Patreon: / hikingguy Monthly Hiking News (free): / hikingguy Subscribe: / hikingguy CalTopo is one of the most powerful mapping tools available for hikers, climbers, and backcountry travelers. In this beginner-friendly guide, I walk you through everything you need to get started — from planning a hike on the web to syncing it with your phone, using offline maps in the field, and recording your own tracks. CalTopo may not look as slick as Gaia GPS, but it offers serious mapping power at a great price, and once you understand the basics, it’s straightforward to use. We’ll start on the CalTopo website, where I explain the free and paid plans. The $20/year mobile subscription is the sweet spot for most hikers, unlocking offline maps while still including plenty of high-quality map layers. I’ll show you how to use the MapBuilder Topo layer for planning, stack overlays like public land boundaries and fire history, and even add official park maps as “map sheets.” You’ll see how to draw a route, label it, and check elevation profiles and terrain stats before saving it to your account. Next, we switch to the CalTopo mobile app to sync the route, download the area for offline use, and prepare for a real-world test. Out in the field, I demonstrate how to record a track, navigate along your planned route, and drop waypoints for features like water sources or viewpoints. You’ll see how the app tracks your progress in real-time and how navigation responds when you wander off course. Finally, we return to the desktop to sync and review the hike. The recorded track appears alongside the planned route, complete with terrain stats and the waypoints we marked. It’s a smooth workflow from desktop to trail and back, and with offline maps, you can use CalTopo confidently even far from cell service. If you’re looking for a powerful, affordable mapping solution, CalTopo is well worth learning. For detailed step-by-step instructions, screenshots, and links, check out the full guide on hikingguy.com. --- Disclaimer: Some of these links are affiliate links where I’ll earn a small commission if you make a purchase at no additional cost to you. I only recommend gear I actually use and trust.