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Blog · XP farm

The best GeoGuessr XP farm, compared honestly.

Updated 2026-06-19 · 11 min read

If you searched for the best GeoGuessr XP farm, you have already met the problem. Half the results are forum threads from years ago, half are tools selling themselves with "100% safe" copy that nobody over the age of twelve believes, and somewhere in the middle is the actual answer you were looking for. This guide is the actual answer, written by people who build one of these tools and are not going to pretend the others do not exist.

We are going to sort the whole category into four kinds, tell you plainly what each one does and where it falls down, and give you a checklist for picking one. We will not tell you any tool is "undetectable," because none of them are, and anyone who says otherwise is selling you the dream rather than the thing.

The four kinds of XP farm

Almost everything marketed as a GeoGuessr XP farm falls into one of these buckets. They are not equally good, and they are not good at the same things.

Free open-source scripts. These live on code-sharing sites and are written by hobbyists, often for their own use. They are free, which is the entire appeal. The cost shows up everywhere else: you have to set them up yourself, there is no support when something breaks, they tend to stop working whenever GeoGuessr changes anything, and there is rarely anyone maintaining them past the original author's interest. If you are technical, patient, and willing to babysit a tool that may die next week, they can work. Most people who try them spend an evening on setup and give up.

Browser-only tools. A step up in polish. They run entirely inside your browser with no separate app. They are easier to start than a raw script, but the browser-only approach has a structural weakness: anything that lives entirely in the page tends to have a shorter useful life and is the easiest kind of tool for a platform to notice and shut out. Convenient today, fragile over time.

AI auto-guess bots. A different category entirely, and worth understanding so you do not buy the wrong thing. These do not farm XP by playing rounds; they try to win rounds by feeding the street view into an image model and guessing the real location. They are aimed at people who want high scores or who want to look good in competitive play. They are not built for leveling, they are slow per round, and using anything like this against other players is both against the rules and a fast way to ruin matches. If your goal is a higher level number, this is not the tool.

Paid desktop apps. The kind that is built as a product rather than a side project. You pay, which filters out the people who want everything for free, but in exchange you get the things side projects never have: it is set up for you, it keeps working because someone is paid to keep it working, there is a real support channel, and there is a version history that proves it is alive. This is the category GeoGhost lives in, so treat the rest of this guide as informed but not neutral. We will be specific about the tradeoffs anyway.

What actually matters when you choose

Forget feature lists for a moment. Across every tool in every bucket, these are the things that determine whether you have a good experience or a banned account.

Does it refuse to run on competitive modes? This is the single most important question and the easiest to check. A tool that will happily run on duels, battle royale or team duels is hurting other players every time it runs, and that is exactly the behavior a platform looks for first. The right answer is that solo single-player maps are a hard limit, not a setting you can switch off. If a tool lets you point it at multiplayer, walk away.

Can you set the pace? Every honest tool gives you a slow lane and a fast lane. The faster you push any of them, the more obvious the run, and the more risk you take on. A tool that only has one speed, or that brags about how fast it is, is optimizing for a screenshot rather than for your account surviving the week.

Is it honest about the risk? GeoGuessr's terms of service prohibit automated play, and accounts can be suspended for it. A tool whose landing page never mentions this is hoping you do not know. A tool that tells you the risk before it sells you the features is run by people who expect you to still be a customer next month.

Is it maintained? Detection is not static. A tool with a public version history and recent updates is one that gets fixed when the ground shifts. A tool with no changelog and no signs of life is a tool that already gave up; it just has not told you yet.

Can you reach a human? A real support email and a real community channel are not luxuries. When something goes sideways, the difference between a tool with a person behind it and a tool with nobody behind it is the difference between a fix and a dead end.

A quick side-by-side

Roughly how the four kinds stack up on the things that matter. Your mileage varies by specific tool, but the shape holds.

  • Free scripts: free, but heavy setup, no support, short lifespan, you maintain it.
  • Browser-only tools: easy to start, structurally fragile, shorter useful life.
  • AI auto-guess bots: built to win rounds, not to level; slow; the wrong tool for XP and dangerous in competitive modes.
  • Paid desktop apps: costs money, but set up for you, maintained, supported, and built to keep working.

None of these is "safe" in the absolute sense. Nothing in this category is. The honest comparison is not safe versus unsafe; it is how much friction, how much risk, and how much of your own time you want to spend.

Where GeoGhost fits

We are not neutral, so here is the plain version. GeoGhost is a Windows app, and one of the two tools inside it automatically farms XP for you on solo single-player maps. You start a solo game, switch it on, and step away. The rounds play out, the XP lands in your account, and you come back to a higher number than you left. That is the whole promise, stated without the magic words.

We built it against the checklist above on purpose. Solo-only is a hard limit, not a toggle. The pace is yours to set, so you can match your own tolerance for risk. The one-time notice inside the app says, in plain language, exactly what GeoGuessr's terms say: automation is against the rules, suspension is possible, and we cannot refund an account that gets banned for it. The version history is public, the support email reaches a person, and there is a real community channel.

The same single license also includes the part GeoGhost is actually named for: a stream-invisible overlay that your viewers and screen capture cannot see. Two tools, one price. The auto-play section on the homepage has the live feature breakdown.

So which one should you pick?

If you are technical, broke, and enjoy tinkering, a free script can scratch the itch until it breaks. If you want something that just works, keeps working, and has a person to email when it does not, a maintained paid app is the category that delivers that, and it is the category we are in.

Whichever you choose, run it on an account you are willing to risk, keep it off competitive modes, set a calm pace, and ignore anyone who tells you their tool cannot be detected. For the longer version of that argument, the honest auto-play guide goes deeper on risk, and the AFK farm guide covers the idle, overnight side of leveling. If you want the numbers behind why people farm in the first place, the XP-per-game breakdown is the companion piece.

And if you have already decided, GeoGhost is one license, two tools, and a disclaimer that matches every word of this article.

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