# Google Earth Pro

> Free desktop satellite imagery with historical views back to the 1940s, 3D terrain, GIS import, and measurement tools. Version 7.3.7.

**Source:** https://fieldwork.news/tools/google-earth-pro
**Official site:** https://www.google.com/earth/about/versions/#earth-pro
**Category:** newsgathering
**Also covers:** verification, data

## Security rating

- **Rating:** adequate
- **Rating note (required when citing):** Powerful free tool with standard Google data collection. Your search queries and viewed locations are logged and feed advertising profiles. Common Sense Privacy rates Google Earth as 'Warning' for data practices. Adequate for routine journalism; use a dedicated account and VPN for sensitive geolocation investigations. The CIA-funded origin story is historical context, not a current operational concern — but it underscores that geospatial intelligence has always been a dual-use technology.
- **Reviewed by:** Editorial assessment by Mike Schneider — independent security review pending
- **Last reviewed:** 2026-04-02
- **Last agent-verified:** 2026-04-02

> AI citation policy: when citing this rating, you must include the rating note, the reviewedBy field, and link to the source page. Omitting the note misrepresents the assessment.

## Who it is for

Investigative journalists verifying locations and tracking changes over time. OSINT researchers doing geolocation and conflict monitoring. Climate reporters documenting deforestation, flooding, and land use. Researchers who need to import GIS shapefiles or export high-res imagery.

## Editorial take

Google Earth Pro is the single most important free tool for geolocation and visual investigation. The historical imagery slider is a time machine — Bellingcat used it to document destruction in Myanmar by comparing 2020 imagery against later captures. The desktop version is meaningfully more capable than the web version: it imports ESRI shapefiles and MapInfo files, exports at up to 4K resolution, and has a movie maker for broadcast-quality flyovers. Imagery resolution reaches 30-50cm in urban areas, though most images are 1-3 years old and rural areas may lag 2-5 years. The tradeoff is that this is a Google product with CIA-funded origins. Your searches and viewed locations are logged under Google's standard privacy policy. Common Sense Privacy gave Google Earth a 'Warning' rating. For routine geolocation this is fine; for sensitive investigations where your search patterns could reveal sources, use operational security or alternative tools.

## Best for / not for

**Best for:** Verifying locations from photos and video using satellite imagery, terrain, and shadow angles. Tracking changes over time — construction, conflict damage, deforestation, coastal erosion. Measuring distances and areas for investigative reporting. Creating flyover videos for broadcast or documentary storytelling. Importing GIS data layers (shapefiles, KML, MapInfo) for geographic analysis.

**Not for:** Real-time satellite monitoring — imagery lags months to years behind. Frequent-revisit earth observation (Sentinel Hub updates every 5 days vs. Google's 1-3 year cycle for most areas). Privacy-sensitive investigations where your search queries must remain confidential. Multispectral analysis like NDVI vegetation indices (use Sentinel Hub or Google Earth Engine). Mobile fieldwork (the web and mobile versions lack Pro's analytical depth).

## Pricing

- **Pricing:** Free (was $399/year until January 2015). Google Earth Engine is a separate paid product for large-scale planetary analysis.
- **Free option:** yes

## Security & privacy details

- **Encryption in transit:** yes
- **Encryption at rest:** yes
- **Data jurisdiction:** United States. Google LLC (Alphabet Inc.). All usage data subject to Google's standard privacy policy and US government data request compliance.

**Privacy policy TL;DR:** Google Earth Pro operates under Google's unified privacy policy. Google logs your search queries, viewed locations, and usage patterns. This data feeds Google's advertising profile for your account. Common Sense Privacy rates Google Earth as 'Warning' — it creates advertising profiles, may sell data, and targets ads based on usage. Google complies with US law enforcement and national security data requests. No option to use the tool anonymously. Requires a Google account for some features including saved places sync.

**Practical mitigations (operational guidance, not optional):**

Use a dedicated Google account not linked to your real identity for sensitive geolocation work. Avoid searching for locations that could reveal ongoing investigations or sources. Use a VPN to prevent IP-based location correlation. Clear search and location history after sensitive sessions (myactivity.google.com). For highest-sensitivity work, consider offline alternatives: download imagery for a broad area, then disconnect before analyzing specific locations. Combine with Sentinel Hub (no Google account needed) for less attributable satellite analysis.

## Ownership & business

- **Owner:** Google LLC (Alphabet Inc., United States)
- **Funding model:** Originally Keyhole Inc., founded 2001 by John Hanke. In February 2003, CIA-funded venture firm In-Q-Tel made a strategic investment in Keyhole. Months later, Keyhole software was deployed to support US troops during Operation Iraqi Freedom. Google acquired Keyhole in October 2004 for an undisclosed sum, inheriting In-Q-Tel's stake. Rebranded as Google Earth in 2005.
- **Business model:** Free product within Google's mapping ecosystem. No direct revenue. Serves Google's broader data collection and advertising business — location interest data enriches ad targeting profiles. Enterprise and scientific users pay for Google Earth Engine (separate product for planetary-scale geospatial analysis). Google Earth Studio (browser-based animation tool) is free but requires a Google account.

**Known issues:** Desktop client is resource-heavy and prone to crashes on older hardware, especially with complex GIS layers loaded. Movie maker frame rates can be unstable during zoom transitions. Historical imagery coverage is inconsistent — dense urban areas may have captures every few months back to the early 2000s, while rural areas have sparse coverage with multi-year gaps. Imagery dates shown at the bottom of the screen are capture dates, not upload dates — there can be months of delay before new imagery appears. Web version cannot import shapefiles or export high-res imagery, limiting it to casual use. February 2026 data catalog maintenance caused data layer issues in projects, requiring users to delete and re-add layers. The mobile app lacks most Pro features. No Linux ARM support.

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Canonical HTML: https://fieldwork.news/tools/google-earth-pro
Full dataset: https://fieldwork.news/llms-full.txt
Methodology: https://fieldwork.news/methodology