Explore Broward County, Florida with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 39 cities and towns in Broward County below.
| County | Broward |
| State | Florida (FL) |
| County Seat | Fort Lauderdale |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 26.152398 |
| Longitude | -80.205337 |
| Cities & Towns | 39 |
| Area Codes | 239, 305, 321, 407, 754, 786, 904, 941, 954 |
Broward County unfolds across a landscape shaped by water and a generous sun, a place where the subtropical humidity hangs like a soft veil. Its terrain is predominantly flat, a gentle slope from the inland Everglades, a vast expanse of sawgrass and cypress, toward the Atlantic coast. The eastern seaboard is a ribbon of developed land, punctuated by canals and intracoastal waterways that mirror the sky with a shimmering fidelity. To the west, the land begins its subtle rise toward the Everglades National Park, its sawgrass plains stretching toward a horizon that often bleeds into the humid air. The county shares its northern border with Palm Beach County, a line drawn less by geography than by the onward march of civilization, and its southern edge meets Miami-Dade County, a boundary marked by the continuing urban sprawl. Rivers here are more often channels and canals, engineered arteries that serve both drainage and transit, carrying the lifeblood of the region toward the sea.
The story of Broward County is one of deliberate cultivation, a region shaped by visionaries who saw potential in its wilder aspects. It was formally established in 1915, carved from the growing counties of Dade and Palm Beach. Early settlers, drawn by the fertile land and the promise of agriculture, began to transform the palmetto scrub and mangrove fringes. The establishment of the county seat in Fort Lauderdale was a deliberate act of centralizing governance in a place already showing signs of becoming a hub, its strategic location on the New River providing a natural focal point for development. Formative episodes often involved the relentless struggle against the water, the draining of wetlands and the construction of levees, a constant negotiation with the raw, untamed Florida. This history is palpable in the older neighborhoods, where the architecture still whispers of a time when the land itself was the primary force.
Broward County hums with a dynamic energy, its economy a diverse engine fueled by tourism, international trade, and a burgeoning technology sector. The felt character of the place is one of constant motion, a place where the bright Caribbean influence in the south meets the more established, perhaps snowbird-inflected, north. People come here for work, for leisure, and for the sheer pleasure of the sun. Landmarks are less about ancient stone and more about the vibrant pulse of modern life: the shimmering expanse of the Fort Lauderdale beach, a long, pale crescent where the Atlantic breakers meet the sand; the intricate network of canals that give the county its nickname, "The Venice of America"; and the vast, wilder beauty of the Everglades fringe, a reminder of the elemental forces that still hold sway. The quality of light at dusk here is extraordinary, painting the clouds in hues of rose and gold, a fleeting, luminous spectacle that seems to hold the day's heat in its soft embrace.
This page provides an interactive map of Broward County, Florida alongside links to detailed street maps for 39 cities and towns. The county seat is Fort Lauderdale. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |