"Tracking a car" doesn't mean one thing anymore. It means about five. Are you trying to find a stolen sedan or find a tax deduction?
Some apps are for straight-up, real-time GPS location. Others are digital logbooks for maintenance, fuel, and mileage. A whole other category watches how you drive—perfect for coaching a new teen driver or just satisfying your own curiosity.
The first step is figuring out what job you actually need done.
For When You Need to Know Where It Is. Right Now.
This is "Find My iPhone" for your 4,000-pound machine. These apps use a physical GPS device you plug into your car's OBD-II port or hide somewhere inside.
CarLock: This one is all about security. It pings your phone if your car moves, if the engine starts, or if the device gets disconnected. Think of it as a modern car alarm that actually tells you what's going on.
Bouncie: A popular choice that tracks location but also adds things like speed alerts, geofencing (get an alert when the car enters or leaves a specific area), and vehicle health diagnostics.
Life360: Lots of people use it to track family members, but its driving features are solid for seeing where your car is. It gives you a real-time location, trip histories, and crash detection. It's less about theft and more about family safety.
I remember my friend losing his 2011 Honda Civic in a multi-story airport parking garage at 4:17 PM on a Tuesday. We spent 45 minutes walking up and down ramps, mashing the panic button. A location app would have solved the whole thing.
For Tracking Maintenance and Expenses
Forget the shoebox of receipts. These apps are digital glove compartments that organize your car's entire service life.
CARFAX Car Care: This is a big one. It pulls service history from thousands of shops automatically, sends reminders for upcoming maintenance, and alerts you to safety recalls. It's a great way to keep a detailed record, which is gold when you go to sell.
Drivvo: This app is for people who want to manage everything. You can track fuel fill-ups, log service expenses, and get detailed reports on your car's actual running costs. It’s a good fit if you’re managing more than one car.
MyAutoLog: This app logs every service, from oil changes to major repairs, building a complete vehicle history. It also tracks fuel consumption and can export your records to a PDF.
For Mileage and Business Use
If you drive for work, every mile is money. Manual logs are a nightmare. These apps do it for you.
MileIQ: One of the most popular mileage trackers. It runs in the background, logs your drives automatically, and then you just swipe to classify them as business or personal. It saves a ton of time.
Everlance: This one tracks mileage automatically but also lets you log other business expenses. It's a solid all-in-one tool for freelancers. You can link a bank account and get IRS-ready reports.
Hurdlr: Like the others, Hurdlr tracks mileage and expenses automatically. Its standout feature is that it helps you calculate estimated tax payments on the fly, which is a lifesaver for self-employed drivers.
For Monitoring Driving Habits
Want to know if your kid is speeding? Or maybe you want to see how hard you're actually braking. These apps give you a scorecard on your driving.
TrueMotion Family: Built for families, this app tries to fix unsafe driving habits. It scores trips, tracks phone use and hard braking, and shows you how everyone in the family is doing.
DriveSmart: This app records your trips and analyzes your acceleration, braking, turning, and speed. It gives you feedback on where you can improve and even helps you remember where you parked.
Some of these apps need a hardware device and others are just on your phone. The right one depends on what you're trying to fix.
Free on Google Play
This article is a map. Trider is the vehicle.
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