CazaLead is a free Google Maps scraper for sales and marketing teams. Extract business names, phone numbers, addresses, websites, and verified emails — 500 contacts every month, no credit card required.
500 free contacts/month · Verified emails included · CSV / Excel / JSON export
A Google Maps scraper is a tool that extracts business information from Google Maps listings automatically. Instead of clicking through dozens of listings and copy-pasting names, phone numbers, addresses, and websites by hand, a scraper takes a search query and a location, then pulls every matching listing into a structured file you can use for sales, marketing, or research.
The data that's available on every Google Maps listing — business name, address, phone number, category, hours, rating, and review count — is public. A scraper just collects it efficiently. The best Google Maps scrapers go further: they crawl each business's linked website to pull verified email addresses, making the resulting list usable for cold email and outbound sequences out of the box.
A free Google Maps scraper is one you can use without paying. The market splits into four kinds: hosted SaaS tools with a free plan (CazaLead, plus the free trials of Outscraper and Apify), Chrome extensions, open-source scripts on GitHub, and manual extraction. Each comes with trade-offs covered later on this page.
Most free tools have a catch: a one-time trial credit, a missing email field, a fragile browser extension, or a developer-only setup. CazaLead's free plan was built to be genuinely useful for sales teams in the US and Canada — every month, forever, without a credit card.
Most "free" Google Maps scrapers give you a small one-time trial credit and then push you to paid. CazaLead's 500-contact tier refreshes every single month — forever — with no credit card on file.
Free scrapers usually stop at the data shown on the Google Maps listing — name, phone, address. CazaLead also crawls each business website to pull verified email addresses, included on the free plan.
Chrome extensions request broad browsing permissions and several have been removed from the store for misuse. CazaLead runs in the cloud — there's nothing to install, no permissions to grant.
CSV, Excel, JSON — formatted to import cleanly into HubSpot, Pipedrive, Salesforce, Instantly, Smartlead. No reformatting, no manual cleanup.
The free plan extracts every field paid plans extract — there's no field gating, only a monthly contact cap.
Email isn't on the Google Maps listing itself — it lives on each business's website. CazaLead crawls the linked website during every extraction and pulls verified emails. Most other free Google Maps scrapers either skip this step entirely or charge extra for it.
No installs, no API keys, no Python. Sign up, search, export. Most users go from account creation to a downloaded lead list in under five minutes.
Create an account at cazalead.com with just an email. No credit card, no phone number, no demo call. Your 500 free monthly contacts are available immediately.
Type your business category and location — "dental clinics in Boston", "plumbers in Toronto", "restaurants in Miami". CazaLead queries Google Maps in real time.
Click extract. CazaLead pulls every matching listing, then crawls each linked website to pull verified email addresses. Most extractions complete in under a minute.
Download your leads in the format your CRM or email tool expects. Import directly into HubSpot, Pipedrive, Instantly, Smartlead, or any other tool that accepts CSV.
How CazaLead's free plan stacks up against the other ways to scrape Google Maps for free.
| Capability | CazaLead Free | Chrome Extensions | GitHub Scripts | Paid Tool Free Trials |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free every month (not one-time) | ||||
| No credit card required | ||||
| No technical setup | ||||
| Verified email extraction | ||||
| Bulk extraction (100+ leads at once) | ||||
| Reliable when Google changes its layout | ||||
| Privacy policy + GDPR compliant | ||||
| CSV / Excel / JSON export | ||||
| Filter by rating / reviews / website | ||||
| Works without installing anything |
If you're shopping around for a free Google Maps scraper, here's the honest landscape — including where each option breaks down.
Convenient but limited. Most cap results per search, lack email enrichment, request broad browser permissions, and break when Google updates Maps. Several have been pulled from the Chrome Web Store for abuse.
Truly free, but require Python or Node.js, dependency setup, and maintenance when Google changes its layout. Email enrichment, filtering, and export all need to be built yourself. Great for engineers, painful for sales teams.
Tools like Outscraper, Apify, and Phantombuster offer small one-time signup credits. Useful for evaluation, but they're not a free plan — once the credit is gone, you're paying. Forecasting cost is hard with credit-based pricing.
Copy-pasting from Google Maps is technically free. Realistically: 100 leads takes a full day, you'll skip email enrichment because it's tedious, and the data goes stale before you finish.
Want a head-to-head on a specific tool? See the side-by-side comparison pages:
500 contacts per month sounds small until you map it to real workflows. For these users, it's often enough that they never upgrade.
500 contacts/month is enough to fill the prospect pipeline for a 1–2 person agency running monthly outbound campaigns to local businesses in a single vertical and city.
Independent SDRs and consultants prospecting local SMBs can run weekly 100-contact extractions inside the free tier — enough to keep a steady cold-email cadence going.
Validating an outbound motion before committing a budget. Pull 500 highly targeted local leads, run a test sequence, and only upgrade when the unit economics work.
Find partners, vendors, or referral sources in your area without paying for an enterprise prospecting tool. A free Google Maps scraper covers the use case fully.
500 verified contacts every month. No credit card. No demo call. Sign up and start extracting in 60 seconds.
Need more than 500 contacts? See paid plans · Read the full guide