Best GPS Options for Adventure Riders (Real-World Tested)
What actually works when you’re off the grid
If you ride adventure bikes long enough, you’ll hit the same problem we all do:
👉 Navigation that works on the road… but fails when it matters most.
I’ve run pretty much everything over the years — phones, GPS units, apps, mounts — and I’ll tell you straight:
There’s no perfect setup.
But there is a setup that works when things go wrong.
This isn’t a tech review.
This is what actually works when you’re deep in the bush, days into a ride.
The 3 Main GPS Options for ADV Riders
Every setup falls into one of these:
- Dedicated GPS units
- Smartphone navigation
- Hybrid setups (the sweet spot)
1. Dedicated GPS Units
👍 Pros
- Built for off-road
- Waterproof, dustproof, crash-resistant
- Glove-friendly
- Reliable in all conditions
👎 Cons
- Expensive
- Clunky interface
- Slower route planning
🧠 Real-world take
If you’re doing proper multi-day ADV or remote riding:
👉 This is still the most reliable option.
No overheating.
No distractions.
No vibration issues.
It just works.
2. Smartphone Navigation
Apps like:
- Gaia GPS
- DMD (Drive Mode Dashboard)
- Google Maps (for road sections)
👍 Pros
- Easy to use
- Cheap (you already own it)
- Fast route planning
- Big, clear screen
👎 Cons
- Vibration kills cameras
- Overheats in sun
- Battery drain
- Doesn’t love dust and water
🧠 Real-world take
Phones are great…
👉 Until they’re not.
Perfect for:
- Day rides
- Light ADV
- Known routes
But when things get rough or remote:
👉 They start showing their limits.
3. Hybrid Setup (What Most Riders End Up With)
👉 GPS unit + phone backup
or
👉 Phone + offline maps + backup plan
🧠 Real-world take
This is where most experienced riders land.
- Redundancy
- Flexibility
- Peace of mind
Because out there…
👉 You don’t get second chances with navigation.
One Rule I Always Follow
👉 Always run two navigation systems.
Not optional. Not “nice to have”.
Essential.
Because:
- Phones fail
- GPS units freeze
- Mounts break
- Batteries die
👉 And they will fail at some point.
My setup:
- Primary navigation
- Backup navigation
Simple.
And don’t overlook this…
👉 Carry a paper map.
Sounds old school — but it works.
- No batteries
- No signal
- Gives you the big picture
Sometimes when things feel off:
👉 A quick look at a map is all you need to reset and keep moving.
The Biggest Mistakes Riders Make
❌ Relying on one device
That’s fine… until it dies.
❌ Overcomplicating the setup
Too many gadgets
Too much clutter
👉 Makes riding worse, not better
❌ Ignoring power
No charge = no navigation
Simple as that.
What Actually Matters More Than the GPS
This is where most riders get it wrong 👇
👉 Your setup matters more than the device
- Clean cockpit
- Clear line of sight
- No distractions
- Easy access
Because when you’re riding technical terrain:
👉 You need focus — not clutter.
Navigation and Packing Go Hand in Hand
You can have the best GPS in the world…
But if your bike setup is messy:
- Cables everywhere
- Gear piled high
- Tank bag in the way
👉 It ruins the whole experience
The better way:
- Keep your cockpit clean
- Keep weight low and tight
- Don’t overload your setup
👉 That’s how you ride better, longer, and safer
So… What Should You Use?
Starting out:
👉 Phone + mount + offline maps
Doing real ADV rides:
👉 Dedicated GPS or hybrid setup
Going remote:
👉 Two systems minimum + paper map
Final Thought
Navigation isn’t about having the latest tech.
👉 It’s about having a system that works when things go wrong.
Because out there:
- It gets rough
- It gets unpredictable
- Things fail
And your setup either handles it…
👉 Or it doesn’t.
Keep it simple.
Keep it reliable.
Always have a backup.
Kurt
Founder, Nomad Moto