Creating Isochrone Travel Time Maps in QGIS with OpenRouteService

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Revision as of 13:06, 30 November 2025 by Alexjmcdougall (talk | contribs) (verifying formatting and referencing image sizing)
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Introduction

Isochrone maps are a map type which represent a geographic extent accessible within a certain time threshold from a specified point or line. They often represent travel time on foot, by car, or by transit services.

This tutorial will provide a walkthrough in the creation of isochrone maps, how to manipulate the output based on their intended use and audience, and a way to host them online to be accessible by other users.

The software to be used for this tutorial is QGIS. Visit their website to download the software at this link. Find an installation guide here if you need assistance through the download process.

Data & Plugins

With the QGIS software downloaded and open, follow the next steps to attach all the necessary plugins and tools to your QGIS interface.

HCMGIS

This tutorial will use the HCMGIS plugin to source basemap. Through this plugin, you can instantly load basemaps from multiple sources, like Google Maps (including satellite imagery), ESRI, and other cartographic services. It also facilitates downloading OpenData, but a different option for doing this will be explored in this tutorial.

From the Menu Toolbar of the QGIS interface, find Plugins and select Manage and Install Plugins. Under All, search for HCMGIS, and click Install Plugins. Installing the HCMGIS plugin

Once installed, you should see HCMGIS listed in the QGIS Menu Toolbar.

OpenRouteService API Setup

Isochrone Creation

Output Refinement & Symbology