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July 2, 2026 · 6 min read

How to Get Business Leads from Google Maps (2026 Guide)

Google Maps is the best source of local B2B leads on the internet. Here's how to pull them into a spreadsheet — the manual way and the fast way.


If you sell to local businesses — restaurants, clinics, gyms, contractors, salons — Google Maps is the richest lead database you have access to. Nearly every business with a physical location is on it, with a phone number and usually a website. The problem is getting it out of the map and into a list you can work.

The manual way

Search a category and city on Google Maps, then open each listing and copy the name, phone, and website into a spreadsheet. It works, but it is slow — a few dozen leads is an afternoon — and Maps only shows you a slice of the results before you have to scroll and reload.

The fast way

Tools like Jesperia automate exactly that: you type the category and place, and it collects every matching business — 100+ per search — along with phone, website, rating, and coordinates, then finds emails on each website. What took an afternoon takes a minute.

What makes a Google Maps lead actually useful

  • A phone number — present on almost every listing.
  • A website — your path to an email and to understanding the business before you reach out.
  • An email— rarely on the listing itself; it lives on the business's website, which is why enrichment matters.
  • Rating & reviews — a quick signal of size and how established they are.

Do it responsibly

Stick to public business data, respect rate limits, and verify emails before you send at volume so you protect your sending domain. Quality beats quantity every time in cold outreach.

Ready to build a list? Jesperia turns a single search into a downloadable CSV of local business leads — names, phones, emails, and websites — in about a minute. Get started free →