Quick answer
Shortlist firstIf your team already lives in Salesforce, the best route planning software usually comes down to three paths. Salesforce Maps if you want the heavyweight geo stack, Geopointe if mapping and geo-visualization matter most, and RouteForce if you want native route planning plus flatter pricing and simpler field execution.
Start from the real field workflow
Teams looking for Salesforce route planning software usually start with a feature checklist: maps, routing, mobile, visits, reports.
That is useful, but it is not enough. Salesforce does not include built-in route planning. That means every field team needs a third-party solution, and the real buying decision is broader: does the product fit the actual field workflow inside Salesforce, or does it create another layer of operational friction?
Tools on the market today
The current market includes several options with different trade-offs:
- Salesforce Maps: Salesforce's own add-on, priced between $75 and $150 per user per month. Deep platform integration, but cost scales linearly with team size.
- Geopointe: Salesforce-native, similar positioning to Salesforce Maps with mapping and territory features.
- Badger Maps: popular external route planner that integrates with Salesforce via API, but runs outside the CRM.
- Map My Customers: field sales platform with routing and territory tools; connects to Salesforce but is not native.
- portatour: automatic scheduling engine that builds plans based on visit frequency rules.
- RouteForce: Salesforce-native, flat-rate pricing up to 20 users, worldwide routing, and EU-hosted routing infrastructure.
What separates these tools is not feature count. It is how well they integrate into the daily Salesforce workflow your reps already use.
Route planning should stay close to CRM data
Field teams already manage accounts, leads, opportunities, and events in Salesforce. If route planning happens outside the CRM, as with tools like Badger Maps or Map My Customers, reps often jump between systems and recreate context manually.
A stronger model is route planning that starts from Salesforce records and keeps execution close to the same dataset. Native apps like RouteForce, Geopointe, or Salesforce Maps avoid that context-switching because the data never leaves the platform. If you want to see that workflow more concretely, jump to the route planning page or the visit-planning page.
Route planning is only one part of field execution
Many products are good at building a route, but weaker after the route is created.
Before choosing software, field teams should compare how the system supports:
- visit creation
- field execution on mobile
- check-in / check-out
- visit notes and reports
- activity data inside Salesforce
Pricing model matters more than buyers expect
Per-user pricing looks simple until adoption grows. With Salesforce Maps at $75-$150 per user per month, a 15-person team already faces $13,500-$27,000 per year. A team that wants broad rollout often needs a pricing model that is easier to defend internally.
That is why buyers should compare not only list price, but rollout logic. The fastest way to pressure-test this is to read the Salesforce Maps pricing breakdown beside the RouteForce pricing page.
- does cost grow every time the team expands?
- is the model easy to explain to finance?
- how many users are covered by standard pricing?
Data residency and EU hosting
For European teams, or any organization selling into regulated markets, data residency is a real evaluation criterion. Where does the routing engine process your account addresses and visit data? Is that data stored inside the EU?
Some tools route data through US-based services without clear documentation. Before committing, buyers should confirm whether the vendor offers EU data processing and can support a DPA aligned with GDPR requirements.
Admin simplicity affects adoption
A route planning product can be good in theory and painful in deployment. Salesforce teams should compare:
- how easy it is to install and configure
- whether reps need another tool outside Salesforce
- how quickly a pilot can be launched
- whether the product supports a free entry point before premium rollout
- whether the vendor provides setup documentation and configuration guides
Where RouteForce fits
RouteForce is designed as Salesforce-native route planning software with a broader field execution model behind it.
- Native inside Salesforce: route planning, visit creation, and execution workflow stay anchored in the platform instead of relying on a separate field app
- Free app first through AppExchange install
- Premium unlock when advanced route optimization and execution depth are needed
- Flat-rate pricing up to 20 users, with larger deployments quoted separately. No per-user cost escalation.
- Worldwide routing coverage: built for teams operating across multiple regions
- EU-hosted routing infrastructure with DPA documentation available for buyers who need stronger data-processing paperwork
→ See the route planning page
→ See how routes become Salesforce visits
→ Compare fixed pricing vs per-user licensing
Conclusion
The best Salesforce route planning software is not only the one that builds routes. It is the one that supports the whole operating model around those routes.
That means comparing workflow quality, pricing logic, admin simplicity, and field execution, not only a feature matrix.
See how RouteForce handles route planning inside Salesforce
Start from the AppExchange install path, then move to the paid scope if your team needs broader route optimization and field execution depth.
Install from AppExchange See pricing