Snapchat is turning your daily hangouts into something a little more… competitive. Because the places visited the most are no longer just memories on Snap Map, they are now something you can actually earn bragging rights for.
What is Snapchat Place Loyalty, and how does it work?
Snapchat has introduced Place Loyalty, a new feature that highlights the places visited most often over time. The idea is simple. The more frequently a user visits a spot, the higher they rank among other visitors to that location.
Based on activity over the past year, users can earn “Top Visitor” badges that are tiered into Bronze, Silver, and Gold. These badges reflect how often a place is visited compared to others, and they can also be shared, adding a social layer to what was previously just passive location tracking. The feature lives within Snap Map, which has grown into one of the most widely used mobile maps. With hundreds of millions of users actively checking where friends are and what is happening nearby, Place Loyalty builds on behavior that already exists instead of trying to create something entirely new.
At its core, this feels like Snapchat doubling down on real-world social behavior. People already have their go-to coffee shops, favorite hangout spots, and regular weekend routines. Place Loyalty simply puts a spotlight on that pattern and gamifies it. Additionally, by rewarding repeat visits, Snapchat is encouraging users to engage more consistently with physical locations, not just digital interactions. It turns everyday routines into something measurable and shareable, which fits neatly into how social platforms are evolving.
At the same time, privacy controls remain intact. Location sharing is still optional and limited to selected friends, and these rankings are only visible to the user. So while the feature feels social, it is still designed to stay personal unless shared.
Which places are people visiting the most with friends?
Alongside the feature, Snapchat has also revealed some of the most popular spots where users tend to visit with friends, specifically in New York and Los Angeles. In New York, places like The Rooftop at Pier 17, the Harry Potter Shop, and Supreme Bowery show up alongside cafes, restaurants, and local hangouts across different boroughs. The list paints a mix of tourist-heavy spots and neighborhood favorites, suggesting that both discovery and routine play a role.
Over in Los Angeles, the trend leans toward a blend of lifestyle and food culture. Locations like The Hollywood Bowl, Brentwood Country Mart, and Joan’s on Third sit alongside popular eateries and coffee spots, highlighting how social outings often revolve around shared experiences like food and events.
What stands out is that these are not just flashy landmarks. They are places people return to, which ties back perfectly to what Place Loyalty is trying to capture. And that is really the hook here. Snapchat is not just mapping where people go. It is starting to map where people belong.






