Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
eodi.me is a desktop neighborhood analysis tool designed to help users “understand an area before arriving.” It divides cities into hexagonal grids and builds neighborhood profiles using public data sources such as OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, and Open-Meteo, covering 15,000+ cities across 200+ countries and regions. Its positioning is closer to lightweight geospatial intelligence and site-selection assistance than to a general-purpose enterprise SaaS product.
The product is built around 13 urban dimensions: vibrancy, nightlife, culture, green space, transport, dining, retail, healthcare, education, business, residential, tourism, and accessibility. Users can adjust preference sliders such as Active, Cultural, Quiet, Trendy, Nature, and Urban to generate fit-based heatmaps, then inspect individual hexagons through Vibe Reports, radar charts, scores, and POI highlights. Paid features include importing custom POIs, CSV export, custom recalculation, and saved presets. Business/Enterprise plans support a local REST API, batch analysis, and Docker self-hosting.
The free plan is $0 and requires no account or credit card. It already includes map browsing, 13-dimension reports, similar-neighborhood discovery, and preference exploration. Pro is listed at $3.99/month and adds custom POI import, CSV export, presets, and related features. The page also mentions around 35% savings on annual billing and a one-time Lifetime option, but “downloads and purchases are temporarily unavailable” at the moment. Team and Business pricing requires contact, so practical procurement feasibility is currently limited.
A key advantage is its clear privacy design: the analysis engine runs locally, and searches, bookmarks, and custom data are not uploaded. Commercial plans can also be self-hosted, which makes it suitable for teams that handle sensitive location data. Its global coverage and similar-neighborhood discovery are useful for international relocation, travel planning, and early-stage screening for retail sites or real estate. Limitations include Windows being the primary platform, while macOS is still in development; map tile display still requires an internet connection; data quality depends on open POI sources, so remote or newly developed areas may be underrepresented; and information on enterprise permissions, compliance certifications, SLAs, and similar requirements has not been disclosed.
It is suitable for individuals researching neighborhoods before moving or traveling, as well as franchise, retail, and real estate teams conducting early site selection and address portfolio evaluation. The main content does not provide details on access from China. Payments involve Polar and LemonSqueezy, so convenience for domestic Chinese payments is unclear. If you need local Chinese maps, Chinese-language POIs, and domestic compliance, consider comparing it with Amap/Baidu open platforms, GeoHey, QGIS, CARTO, or ArcGIS Business Analyst.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on eodi.me official site.
eodi.me is an Unknown Maps provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach eodi.me directly.