- Right-click the field in the Data pane that contains geographic location data. Then select 'Geographic Role', then choose the appropriate role for your field (for example, Country/Region).
- Your dimension (Abc) field will be converted into a geographic field and marked with a globe icon beside it.
- Tableau will automatically generate Longitude and Latitude measure values based on your geographic field.
- On the Marks card, open the dropdown menu and select Map.
- Drag your geographic field from the data pane to Detail on the Marks card.
- Drag your longitude and latitude fields from the data pane to the 'column' and 'rows' shelves
- A geographic map will appear on your worksheet.
How to Create a Map in Tableau
Try this guided demo to learn how to create a map in Tableau.
📌 Why this matters
Creating maps transforms raw location data into immediate visual insights, letting you spot geographic patterns, regional performance differences, and spatial relationships that spreadsheets hide. Maps also unlock interactive storytelling capabilities that engage stakeholders far more effectively than traditional charts. Geographic visualizations naturally prompt location-based questions and reveal distribution trends across territories, making your data presentations more compelling and driving deeper analytical conversations about regional strategies, resource allocation, and market opportunities.
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