Map & Property Disclaimer
Last updated: June 20, 2026
Trail Tracker shows maps and property information to help you navigate while tracking game. This data is approximate and must not be relied on for legal boundary decisions.
Not survey-grade
Property lines, parcel numbers, acreage labels, and public-land boundaries shown in Trail Tracker come from third-party sources including OpenStreetMap, state and county GIS portals, BLM data, and user-drawn boundaries. These sources may be:
- Out of date (ownership changes, new surveys, timber harvest, etc.)
- Offset by tens of feet or more from true ground locations
- Incomplete in rural or recently subdivided areas
- Missing entirely in some counties or states
Trail Tracker is not a licensed survey. Do not use it to settle property disputes, establish hunting rights, or determine lawful access.
Know before you go
- Always confirm land ownership and permission with the landowner, lease, or official county records.
- Posted boundaries, fences, and signage on the ground take precedence over map lines.
- When tracking near property edges, use extra caution — a GPS line on a screen does not grant access.
- Public land overlays are general reference layers and may not reflect recent transfers or easements.
GPS & maps
Satellite imagery, topo maps, and GPS positions are also approximate. Tree canopy, ravines, and phone hardware can degrade accuracy. The “back to truck” bearing and distance are straight-line estimates, not turn-by-turn walking directions.
User-drawn boundaries
Lines you draw on the map or import from files are only as accurate as the points you place or the file you imported. You are responsible for verifying any boundary you save.
Official sources
For legal or tax purposes, use your county auditor, recorder of deeds, or a licensed surveyor. Trail Tracker links to official GIS portals where available but does not guarantee their accuracy or availability.