If you are planning new locations, reshaping territories or trying to get more from your existing network, you will bump into the phrase catchment area calculation fairly quickly. It sounds technical, but at its heart it is simply about answering one question:
“Where do our customers actually come from and how far could we realistically reach?”
In this guide we will walk through what a catchment area is, the main ways to calculate it, how a modern catchment area tool or finder should work, and a simple template you can adapt for your own business. We will also show how Atlas Mapping and our Vision software fit into the picture.
A catchment area is the geographic area from which a location draws its customers, users or service recipients. On a map it is usually shown as a shaded region around a site, often based on things like travel time, travel distance or local boundaries .Retailers, franchises, healthcare providers, local authorities and education providers all use catchment areas to understand who they serve and where there is potential for growth or gaps in coverage.
For businesses, catchment areas are the starting point for:
If the catchment area is wrong, every decision that rests on it is on shaky ground.
There is no single formula for catchment area calculation. Instead, you choose a method that fits how people travel to your sites and how your business operates. The most common methods, used across many mapping and analytics tools, are these.
This is the classic approach. You put a circle around your location at a chosen distance, for example 5 miles around a gym or 2 miles around a convenience store.
This type of catchment is sometimes called a buffer trade area. It is quick and can be useful for a first pass, especially when you want to compare your footprint against competitors.
The drawback is that it ignores real world travel patterns. Ten miles in rural Scotland is very different from ten miles around the M25 at rush hour.
A more realistic approach is to build catchments based on travel time rather than straight line distance. For example:
These are called isochrone maps. They take into account the actual road network and transport options, so you see a much truer picture of how long it takes people to reach you.
Walk and drive time catchments are ideal when you are:
The most advanced catchment area calculation methods draw on observed behaviour. Instead of assuming that people will travel in neat circles, they look at real patterns of movement and visit behaviour for different types of location.
For example, you can:
This gives you a dynamic catchment that reflects real behaviour rather than tidy geometry.
In practice, most good catchment strategies use a blend of these approaches. At Atlas Mapping we often start with time based isochrones, then refine with behaviour and customer data once we have a baseline.
If you are searching for a catchment area calculation tool or catchment area finder, there are a few things worth checking before you commit.
A modern tool should let you:
Our own platform, Vision, was designed specifically for businesses and franchises that want this kind of power without complex, technical software. It combines your data with third party information in a simple online tool and supports territory mapping, catchment analysis and network planning in one place.
Atlas Mapping has worked with hundreds of brands, many of them franchises, to design territories and catchment strategies that can scale. The short version: we live and breathe this stuff. Our team has created and shared well over one hundred thousand territories, and Vision has become a central planning tool for clients across sectors from care to automotive.
Our typical process brings together:
The result is a catchment strategy that is robust enough for board level decisions but still easy to explain to a franchisee, store manager or investor.
If you are just getting started, it helps to work through a basic template. You can adapt the steps below for a single site, a pilot franchise territory or a full national network.
1. Clarify your objective
2. Define your ideal customer
3. Decide on your primary method
Pick one main method for your first version of the catchment:
You can refine later with more detail, but try not to overcomplicate the first pass.
4. Choose your key metrics
For each catchment, decide what you will measure. For example:
These scores will help you compare catchments and size territories fairly.
5. Build and visualise in a catchment area tool
Use a catchment area tool like Vision to:
6. Sense check with local knowledge
Share the maps with people close to the ground. Ask:
7. Lock in, then review regularly
Once you are happy, lock in the catchments and use them consistently for planning and reporting. Set a review point, for example annually or when you hit a certain number of locations.
You can experiment with catchment area calculation on your own, especially if you have one or two locations. Where Atlas Mapping really adds value is when:
We help you “solve complex problems with logic and grace”, as we like to put it, and show you that mapping and analytics can actually be enjoyable along the way.
If you would like to see how a dedicated catchment area finder and mapping platform could work for your organisation, the best next step is to have a look at the Vision demo or get in touch with the team. From there we can explore your current network, sketch out some catchment options and give you a clear view of where to take your business next.