Most store locators are just directories. A buyer with real intent clicks “Find a Dealer,” sees an address, and leaves without ever entering your CRM. That means one of your highest-intent moments disappears from view.
A HubSpot-powered store locator changes that. Instead of sending traffic to a static list or third-party locator, you can turn the search itself into a lead capture flow: collect the buyer’s location, rank the nearest partners, create a contact in HubSpot, and route the opportunity to the right dealer or branch automatically.
Your website may have a “Find a Dealer” or “Find a Partner” page, but in many cases it does not behave like a conversion point. Visitors search for a nearby location, get the information they need, and leave your site without leaving a trace in your CRM. The result is a silent loss of demand at exactly the moment intent is highest.
This is the default state in many B2B partner programs. Partner data lives in spreadsheets, the locator sits outside the CRM, and no one can connect location searches to pipeline impact. If you cannot see who searched, what they needed, and which partner they were routed to, you are losing attribution and lead control.
A HubSpot store locator is not a standard out-of-the-box feature. It is a custom architecture built from four parts that work together inside your CRM.
A HubSpot store locator is not a standard out-of-the-box feature. It is a custom architecture built from four parts that work together inside your CRM.
Together, these steps turn a static directory into a closed-loop lead capture system.
Bosch Rexroth, needed to replace a disconnected dealer directory with a HubSpot-based solution that could support a large European partner network. Their previous setup was not connected to HubSpot, so partner searches happened outside the CRM and lead visibility was lost.
Elixir Solutions built and implemented the locator as a reusable architecture. The first rollout went live for the French and Italian subsidiaries in three languages: French, Italian, and English. From there, the same logic, custom objects, and Google Maps integration can be reused across additional markets.
The key advantage is not just that the locator works. It is that the same build can support multiple countries without rebuilding the underlying CRM logic each time.
This pattern fits any company that sells through a distributed network. It is especially relevant for:
If buyers use your “Find a Partner” page to make a decision, that page should not behave like a dead end. It should capture intent, qualify demand, and route it into your CRM.
Ask yourself these three questions about your current partner network setup:
If you answer “no” to two of the three, your locator is probably leaking leads.
Does HubSpot have a native store locator feature?
No. HubSpot does not include a store locator out of the box. A working locator requires custom development on top of HubSpot, including custom objects for partners, custom forms with map integration, and a connection to a maps API like Google Maps. The architecture is reusable across implementations.
Why use the Google Maps API instead of a third-party store locator app?
A third-party app stores your partner data outside HubSpot and creates a sync problem. Building on the Google Maps API directly keeps your partners as HubSpot custom objects, your leads as HubSpot contacts, and your full pipeline visible in one system. You also avoid recurring per-locator licensing fees common with locator SaaS tools.
How long does this kind of build take?
A first build typically takes a few weeks of custom development depending on complexity, partner data volume, and how many countries or languages are required. Once the architecture is built, deploying to additional countries is faster because the logic and HubSpot structure are already in place.
What HubSpot subscription level is required?
Custom objects require Enterprise tier (Marketing Hub Enterprise, Sales Hub Enterprise, or Service Hub Enterprise). Custom code workflows for the latitude and longitude assignment require Operations Hub Professional or higher. Verify your current subscription before scoping a build.
Can the locator be deployed across multiple countries and languages?
Yes. Because the logic is based on GPS coordinates and HubSpot properties rather than country-specific configuration, the same architecture supports multi-language and multi-country rollouts. The form labels and content translate. The underlying data model stays the same.
If your partner network is generating demand but not capturing it, the locator itself may be the problem. A HubSpot-based store locator can turn that lost traffic into tracked leads, routed deals, and measurable partner pipeline