Delhivery has opened up its in-house mapping technology as a commercial platform, launching Delhivery Maps, an AI-native geospatial suite aimed at businesses, startups, and gig-economy platforms that rely on precise address intelligence and routing in India. The launch coincides with the company’s 15th anniversary and signals a strategic move to position Delhivery not just as a logistics operator, but also as an infrastructure provider to the broader digital and commerce ecosystem.
Delhivery Maps is built specifically for India’s complex address environment, where last-mile delivery often depends on incomplete or unstructured addresses, local landmarks, and highly variable road conditions. The platform was originally developed to power Delhivery’s own operations and now supports all of its logistics businesses, before being productised for external use by enterprises and developers.
At the core of the platform is Naksha LLM, Delhivery’s homegrown geospatial large language model, which underpins what the company describes as an AI-native approach to mapping. Instead of relying solely on static map databases, Naksha LLM applies geospatial reasoning on top of Delhivery’s logistics telemetry, learned from large volumes of shipment and GPS data generated by its nationwide network.
The suite exposes a range of APIs including address auto-complete, geocoding and reverse geocoding, vehicle-aware routing, navigation, distance matrix, and map tiles, which can be integrated into logistics systems, checkout flows, and dispatch tools. Delhivery is also enabling access to Naksha LLM through the same platform, allowing developers to plug location intelligence into AI agents and workflows.
For startups and founders building in e-commerce, quick-commerce, mobility, and hyperlocal services, Delhivery Maps offers a domain-specific alternative to general-purpose consumer mapping tools, tuned to commercial routing, vehicle constraints, and Indian address patterns. The company’s decision to commercialise its mapping stack also reduces its own dependence on third-party providers while creating a new revenue stream from infrastructure services.
With Delhivery Maps now live via its developer channels, businesses can begin integrating the APIs into their products for address resolution, route optimisation, and operational planning. The move adds a new homegrown mapping option to India’s digital infrastructure at a time when reliable location intelligence is increasingly critical for scaling online commerce and logistics-heavy startups.
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