Waze is a community-driven mobile navigation app that provides turn-by-turn directions, real-time traffic updates, and location-based alerts to help drivers avoid congestion and hazards.[1][3] It serves over 130 million monthly active users worldwide, primarily individual drivers and commuters seeking smarter routing, by solving the problem of outdated static maps through crowdsourced data from its user base.[3][6] Acquired by Google in 2013 for $1.1–1.3 billion, Waze has sustained strong growth under Google, reaching 140–150 million monthly users by 2021 while monetizing via hyperlocal advertising.[3][6][8]
Waze originated in 2006 in Israel when Ehud Shabtai, a software engineer with a philosophy and computer science background from Tel Aviv University, started an open-source project called FreeMap Israel from his Tel Aviv balcony after frustration with a gifted GPS device's lack of real-time traffic data.[1][2][3] Shabtai teamed up with co-founders Amir Shinar and Uri Levine—both veterans of Israel's elite Unit 8200 intelligence unit—to commercialize it, forming Waze Mobile Ltd. in 2008 (rebranded from FreeMap Israel) with the tagline "Outsmarting Traffic, Together."[1][2][3] Early funding from Israeli VCs like Magma and Vertex Ventures, plus Bluerun Ventures, fueled expansion; by 2011, it had raised $55 million, grown to 80 employees mostly in Ra'anana, Israel, and began monetizing in late 2012 via location-based ads.[2][3] Pivotal traction came from its crowdsourced model, leading to Google's $1.1–1.3 billion acquisition in June 2013, which preserved Waze's independent operation and Israel-based team.[1][3]
Waze rode the explosion of smartphones and GPS in the late 2000s, capitalizing on Israel's "Startup Nation" tech ecosystem—fueled by Unit 8200 alumni like its founders—to pioneer crowdsourced mapping amid rising urban traffic and data-sharing trends.[3][7] Its timing aligned with mobile internet ubiquity, outpacing static rivals by turning users into a real-time data network, which pressured incumbents like Google to acquire rather than compete.[1][2][8] Today, it influences the ecosystem by enhancing Google's Maps with live insights, boosting hyperlocal ad markets, and exemplifying data network effects in mobility tech, while inspiring similar user-driven models in ride-sharing and logistics.[6][8]
Under Google, Waze will likely deepen integration with Android Auto, electric vehicle routing, and AI-driven predictions, capitalizing on surging connected car adoption and autonomous driving trends.[6][8] Expanding global urban mobility demands, multimodal transport (e.g., integrating public transit like co-founder Levine's Moovit), and privacy-focused data sharing will shape its path, potentially amplifying its 150 million+ user base amid competition from Apple Maps and Tesla's systems.[4][6] As mobility evolves toward shared and smart ecosystems, Waze's community-powered edge positions it to remain a navigation leader, outsmarting traffic just as it did from a Tel Aviv balcony.
Waze has raised $67.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Waze's investors include Bond, IVP, TCV, 3VC, BlueRun Ventures, Canaan Partners Israel, Rally Ventures, Vertex Ventures Israel, Viola Ventures, Shahan Soghikian.
Waze has raised $67.0M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $30.0M Series C in October 2011.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 1, 2011 | $30.0M Series C | Bond, IVP, TCV | |
| Dec 1, 2010 | $25.0M Series B | 3VC, BlueRun Ventures, Bond, Canaan Partners Israel, IVP, Rally Ventures, TCV, Vertex Ventures Israel, Viola Ventures, Shahan Soghikian | |
| Feb 1, 2008 | $12.0M Series A | 3VC, BlueRun Ventures, Bond, Canaan Partners Israel, IVP, Rally Ventures, TCV, Vertex Ventures Israel, Viola Ventures, Shahan Soghikian |