Choropleth Map
Choropleth Map
A choropleth map colors geographic regions — countries, states, districts — according to the value of a variable, using a color scale to communicate magnitude across a spatial canvas. The darker or more saturated a region, the higher its value, allowing viewers to absorb geographic patterns instantly.
Regional comparison
Color differences across borders make it effortless to compare performance, density, or any metric between regions without reading individual numbers.
Distribution patterns
Clusters of similarly colored regions reveal geographic concentrations — whether that's economic activity, population density, disease prevalence, or market penetration.
Scale & boundaries
Works at any geographic resolution, from world maps down to city districts, making it versatile for both macro-level strategy and local operational analysis.
When to avoid it
Choropleth maps can be misleading when large low-population regions dominate visually despite having less significance. In such cases, consider a bubble map where size reflects magnitude rather than geographic area.
Best suited for dashboards comparing regional metrics, policy analysis, market mapping, and any use case where geographic boundaries carry meaningful analytical weight.
