Support
We're here to help you get the most out of Map Data.
Have a question, found a bug, or want to request a feature? Reach out and a real person at Kiza, Inc. will get back to you — typically within two business days.
To help us resolve your issue quickly, please include your device model, iOS version, the app version (find it on the Settings screen inside Map Data), and a short description of what you expected versus what happened. Screenshots are always welcome.
Frequently asked questions
What kinds of data can I map?
Any tabular data with a region column and a value column. You can import a CSV file from your device, load a CSV from a URL, or ask a built-in AI provider to generate the data for you. Map Data auto-detects the columns and joins the values to U.S. states or counties.
Which maps are included?
Map Data ships with U.S. state and county base maps — all 50 states plus the District of Columbia, and all 3,142 counties — rendered with an Albers USA projection that includes Alaska and Hawaii insets.
How does the AI data feature work?
You describe the map you want, and Map Data sends that request to the AI provider you choose — Anthropic, OpenAI, or Gemini. The provider returns structured values that are joined to the map. You supply your own API key for the provider you use.
Where are my API keys stored?
Your API keys are stored securely in the device Keychain and never leave your device except to communicate directly with the AI provider you selected. Kiza, Inc. never sees or collects your keys. See our Privacy Policy for details.
What formats can I export?
You can export your map as SVG (scalable vector), PDF (print-ready), or PNG (high-resolution image), and you can export the joined dataset back out as CSV.
Which devices are supported?
Map Data is a universal app for iPhone and iPad running a recent version of iOS/iPadOS.
My data didn't match the map. What happened?
Map Data matches your region column to states or counties by name, abbreviation, or FIPS code. If some rows didn't match, check that the region names are spelled consistently or switch to FIPS codes for the most reliable results. County names should be paired with their state to avoid ambiguity.