Starting today in 13 cities (Auckland, Austin, Baltimore, Brisbane (AU), Dallas, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, San Diego, Oakland, San Antonio, San Jose, Scottsdale and Seattle), a navigation option shows how long it will take to reach the machine plus an estimate for the cost and time of the ride.

If you choose Lime as an option, then it will switch to the dedicated app, or hop over to your phone's app store (on iOS or Android) if you don't have it installed. It shouldn't be too surprising that Google picked Lime for the first scooter integration we're noticing in Maps -- along with Uber, its parent company Alphabet recently made a sizable investment in these scooters. Right after that deal closed Uber started offering Lime rentals via its app, and now Google is following suit. Being so visible in Maps will give Lime an edge over competition -- we'll see if anyone launches a similar tie-in with Apple Maps, or if other mobility services join the recommendations on Google's Maps.