How to Use the Bing Maps Scraper (Step by Step)

Bing Maps is an often-overlooked source of local business leads, and that is exactly what makes it valuable. Because fewer prospectors mine it, the contacts you find there tend to be less saturated than the same companies on more crowded directories. The LeadStal Bing Maps Scraper makes it simple to harvest that data into a tidy list.

Below you will find the complete process, from adding the free extension to sending tailored outreach. Searching, extracting, and exporting your Bing Maps leads costs nothing, so you can build large prospect lists at no charge. Paid plans only come into play when you want LeadStal to write and send personalized messages, beginning at $9.99 per month.

Step by step

1

Install the free Bing Maps Scraper extension

Grab the LeadStal Bing Maps Scraper from the install page and add it to Chrome. The free extension drops an icon into your toolbar and is ready to use right away, with no upgrade required to scrape.

2

Open Bing Maps

Navigate to bing.com/maps in your browser. The LeadStal panel detects the Bing Maps interface and loads automatically, so the scraper tools appear without any extra setup.

3

Search for your target businesses

Enter a search such as 'roofing contractors in Denver' or 'cafes near Seattle' in the Bing Maps search box. Pan and scroll the results so Bing loads the full set of listings you want to collect.

4

Click Extract to pull the listings

Open the LeadStal panel and hit Extract. The scraper walks through each Bing Maps result and gathers the business name, phone number, website, address, category, and rating where shown.

5

Review the extracted business data

Check the captured rows inside the panel. Verify the phone numbers and websites, drop any business outside your service area, and clear out duplicate entries so your list stays clean and focused.

6

Export to CSV or push to LeadStal

Press Export to save your Bing Maps leads as a CSV file for your CRM or spreadsheet. You can alternatively send the entire list into LeadStal so your prospecting data lives in one dashboard.

7

Launch AI-personalized outreach

Inside LeadStal, convert your Bing Maps list into AI-crafted emails that reference each company and its city. Collecting the data was free, and sending personalized campaigns starts at $9.99 per month.

Pro tips

  • Search the same keyword across several nearby towns on Bing Maps to uncover smaller businesses that bigger directories often miss.
  • Use category-specific queries so Bing returns a more precise mix of listings instead of broad, mixed results.
  • Compare your Bing Maps haul against any Google Maps list you have, since the overlap is often small and the combined set is larger.
  • Filter exported rows by whether a website is present to separate online-ready prospects from offline-only businesses.

Questions, answered

Is the Bing Maps Scraper free?

Yes. The extension and all extraction of Bing Maps business data are free to use. There is a cost only when you send AI-personalized outreach, which starts at $9.99 per month.

What data does it pull from Bing Maps?

It collects business names, phone numbers, websites, addresses, categories, and ratings from the listings shown in your Bing Maps search results.

Do I need any coding skills to use it?

None. You simply search on Bing Maps, click Extract in the LeadStal panel, and then Export. Everything happens through buttons inside your browser.

Can I export the leads to CSV?

Yes. Your Bing Maps leads download as a CSV that works in Excel, Google Sheets, and CRMs, and the list can also be pushed straight into your LeadStal account.

How accurate is the scraped data?

The scraper reflects the live details Bing Maps displays for each business, so accuracy depends on how current those listings are. A quick review before export lets you trim anything questionable.

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