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Do audio tours use GPS?
Audio Tours

Do audio tours use GPS?

July 13, 20265 min read

You're walking down a cobblestone street in Lisbon, headphones in, not looking at your phone. You pass an ornate church and suddenly a voice starts telling you its story. No buttons pressed. No screen tapped. Your phone knew exactly where you were.

That's GPS at work. And yes, most modern audio walking tours use it.

How GPS triggers audio on a walking tour

Your phone has a GPS receiver built in. It picks up signals from satellites orbiting the Earth and uses them to pinpoint your location within a few metres. On AudaTours, each stop on a tour has a geofence around it. Think of it as an invisible circle drawn around a landmark.

When you walk into that circle, the app detects your proximity and automatically plays the audio for that stop. Walk past the Colosseum? The narration starts. Approach the Trevi Fountain three stops later? The next story begins. You don't need to look at a map, tap a button, or follow a numbered route. You walk, and the tour keeps up with you.

This is sometimes called GPS voice navigation for walking tours. The principle is similar to turn-by-turn directions in a car: your phone knows where you are and responds accordingly.

GPS-triggered vs manual: two types of audio tour

Not all audio tours work the same way. There are two main approaches:

  • Manual audio guides: The museum-style experience. You get a device or an app, look at a numbered sign next to an exhibit, and press the matching number to hear the audio. You're in control, but you're also constantly looking down, matching numbers, and managing playback.
  • GPS-triggered audio tours: The walking tour experience. You put your phone in your pocket and walk. The app uses your GPS location to figure out which stop you're near and plays the right audio at the right time. Hands-free, eyes-up.

AudaTours uses GPS-triggered playback for all its walking tours. It's the difference between reading a guidebook and having a GPS tour guide walk beside you, pointing things out as you go.

Does GPS need internet?

Here's the good part. GPS works without internet. Your phone's GPS receiver talks directly to satellites overhead. No Wi-Fi, no mobile data, no roaming charges required for the location tracking itself.

On AudaTours, you download the tour over Wi-Fi before you head out. The audio files, stop information, and map data all get stored on your phone. Once downloaded, GPS positioning and audio playback work completely offline. You could put your phone in airplane mode and the tour would still track your location and play each story as you reach it.

This matters when you're abroad and trying to avoid data roaming costs. Or when you're in an old town centre where signal is patchy at best.

Battery tips for GPS tours

GPS does use battery. It's constantly checking your position against those satellites. But it's less than you might think. A typical 60 to 90 minute walking tour uses roughly 5% to 10% of your battery, depending on your phone model and age.

A few simple ways to keep things running smoothly:

  • Start with a decent charge. 50% or more and you'll have no issues for a full tour plus photos and navigation afterwards.
  • Close unnecessary apps. Social media and streaming apps running in the background drain power that GPS needs.
  • Lower your screen brightness. The audio plays with your screen off, so you won't need to stare at it.
  • Carry a small power bank. Cheap insurance for a full day of exploring.

What happens when GPS drops out?

GPS isn't perfect. Tall buildings, narrow streets, tunnels, and indoor sections can weaken the satellite signal. It's called a "urban canyon" effect, and it's more common in historic European city centres than you'd expect.

On AudaTours, if your GPS signal weakens, you can manually trigger any stop. Tap the stop on the tour map or the list of stops, and the audio plays instantly. You never lose access to the content. The GPS automation is a convenience, not a requirement.

Most of the time, signal picks back up within seconds once you're in a more open area. Your phone also uses Wi-Fi and cell tower positioning to supplement satellite GPS, so complete dead zones are rarer than you'd think.

Try a GPS-guided walking tour

AudaTours offers self-guided audio tours in 1,000+ cities, available in 50+ languages, starting at $2.99. Every tour uses GPS to play audio automatically as you walk. Download a tour, put your headphones in, and let your phone handle the rest.

Have questions? Check our FAQ. Ready to go? Browse tours and find your next city.

Why audio tours win

GPS-Triggered Playback

Audio plays automatically as you walk near each landmark. No buttons, no screen taps. Your phone handles the timing.

No Internet Required

GPS talks directly to satellites. Download the tour over Wi-Fi and explore completely offline.

Battery Friendly

A full 90-minute tour uses roughly 5% to 10% of your battery. Less drain than scrolling social media.

Manual Override

GPS signal weak? Tap any stop to play it manually. You never lose access to the audio.

50+ Languages

Native-speaker narration in your language. GPS triggers the right audio no matter which language you chose.

Download and Go

Everything downloads to your phone. Audio, maps, stop data. Works in airplane mode, tunnels, and remote areas.

Frequently asked questions

Do audio tours use GPS?

Yes. Modern audio walking tours like AudaTours use your phone's GPS to detect when you're near a landmark and automatically play the narration for that stop. No buttons or manual triggers needed.

Do I need internet for GPS to work on a walking tour?

No. GPS works by communicating with satellites, not the internet. Download your AudaTours tour over Wi-Fi beforehand, and both GPS tracking and audio playback work fully offline.

How much battery does a GPS audio tour use?

A typical 60 to 90 minute walking tour uses about 5% to 10% of your phone's battery. Starting with 50% charge or more is plenty for a full tour.

What if GPS doesn't work in my area?

GPS can weaken near tall buildings or in narrow streets. On AudaTours, you can tap any stop on the map to manually trigger the audio, so you're never stuck waiting for a signal.

How accurate is GPS on a walking tour?

Phone GPS is typically accurate to within 3 to 5 metres outdoors. AudaTours sets geofences around each landmark that account for this, so audio triggers reliably as you approach a stop.

What's the difference between a GPS audio tour and a museum audio guide?

Museum audio guides are manual: you look at a number next to an exhibit and press it to hear audio. GPS audio tours are automatic: your phone detects your location and plays the right story as you walk past each landmark. No numbers, no screen required.

Walk the city. Hear its stories.

Audio tours from $2.99. Pick a city and start exploring.

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