How to Get the Geocoding API Free

Geocoding API allows you to perform geographic location queries. You can specify the location by using latitude, longitude, or a combination of both. The Geocoding API returns the result in a JSON format. The query must be a URL with the latitude and longitude as part of the content. You must use a URL that is a JSON format if you want to get accurate results. You can also specify an optional parameter to use with batch forward and reverse queries. The geocoding API returns the result as a GeoJSON feature collection.

You can also set the limit on how many requests can be made. For example, if you're searching for "coff", your application will make four requests to the Geocoding API. This is fine unless you plan to use the geocodes on different platforms. The geocoding API accepts ISO 3166 alpha 2 country codes. You can set the boundary in the API. The bounding boxes must be four numbers separated by commas.

Some of the geocoding services measure speed in seconds per request. But this isn't enough for scalable operations. Often, these geocoders fail to respond to high volume requests because they lack server resources. Using them as a hall monitor means you'll wait for results. And because they have limited server resources, they'll throttle your requests. To overcome this, you can try using batch processing instead. Batch processing allows you to group many geocoding requests together and get them processed faster.