Fast, flexible storytelling
Create professional-looking stories and presentations called briefings, with a single storytelling system.
Classic Esri Story Maps will be retired in Q1 2026. At that time, you won’t be able to view or edit any stories created with Esri Story Maps.
To preserve the relevant content you created, learn how to migrate it to ArcGIS StoryMaps.
From 2023 to Q1 2026, no new features or enhancements will be made to Esri Story Maps. However, any critical security vulnerabilities will be thoroughly evaluated and patched as necessary.
In contrast, ArcGIS StoryMaps routinely receives new features and enhancements. These features evolve with readers’ and content creators’ changing needs. They also ensure that you can continue to create immersive stories with maps.
Thanks to continual product development, the most familiar classic storytelling patterns are made available in ArcGIS StoryMaps, and organizations of all sizes successfully transition to it. With thousands of stories published daily, storytellers worldwide embrace ArcGIS StoryMaps.
It is also the end of an era, as the classic Esri Story Maps templates are removed from the ArcGIS Online Configurable Apps Gallery. Esri Story Maps enters extended support, meaning stories can be created but only critical maintenance updates are made to the product.
ArcGIS StoryMaps made its debut at the Esri User Conference in July. Jennifer Bell, the product manager for ArcGIS StoryMaps, transported attendees to Nepal and Tibet as she rebuilt the Mapping Mount Everest story by Alex Tait, a geographer for the National Geographic Society, live.
Immediately after, customers around the world began creating immersive stories and collections with the new product. Their feedback helped transform ArcGIS StoryMaps into a powerful storytelling app for GIS professionals to share their work with the world. The initial retirement timeline for Esri Story Maps and the classic templates was provided at this time.
It started with a question: In the digital age, how could maps and multimedia content be woven together to create rich, interactive experiences?
Then, it grew into a mission: to enable anyone to create visual stories, powered by place, regardless of their technical expertise. The lessons learned—and the feedback received—over the eight years that followed built a critical foundation for the creation of ArcGIS StoryMaps.
Evaluate the existing classic stories you created using Esri Story Maps and determine which ones are still widely used. The following resources provide tips to help you recreate them with ArcGIS StoryMaps.
Make your first story, briefing, or collection with ArcGIS StoryMaps by following these tutorials.
Discover the latest updates to ArcGIS StoryMaps.
Explore our video collection for content from new and experienced digital storytellers.