How to See a Satellite Image of Your House: Step-by-Step

(And How to See a Good Close-up of the Roof)

By Jack Gray, Roof Online Editor • Updated November 21, 2023

Also see our Satellite Images and Roofs page.

This article gives step-by-step instructions to help you see a satellite image of your house (or any building with an address, really) using Google Earth. It’s pretty easy.

Note: You cannot see a live satellite view of your house in real time for free on the internet. You just can’t.

To do that, you would have to be able take control of the camera on a satellite, point it at your house and zoom in.

Nobody on earth has the capacity to let millions of random users control a camera on a satellite at the same time, which is what would be necessary for that.

And they certainly wouldn’t let anyone use a satellite-based camera for free.

One company that does allow their customers to access and directly task their imaging satellites is Maxar Technologies. Their services are “aimed at customers with budgets of $1 million a year or more and willing to sign up for a subscription” (source).

Google Earth works by compiling a massive database of satellite images which they combine to create a seamless collage that covers almost the entire globe in amazing detail. But the images they use are typically anywhere from a few weeks to a few years old.

There is currently no official guidance from Google about the average age of the images used in Google Earth, but there are a lot of websites claiming the average image is 1 to 3 years old. I believe they all got that figure from an old post on the Google Earth blog that has since been deleted.

Table of Contents

Click on the images to enlarge them.

1. Download and Install Google Earth Pro

The first thing you should do in order to see a satellite image of your house is download and install Google Earth Pro.

You can use Google Earth on the web without installing it if you’d like, but Google Earth Pro has features you may want later, and…it’s free. You can download Google Earth Pro here.

2. Open Google Earth

Launch Google Earth Pro (or Google Earth).

If this is the first time you’ve opened it, you’ll see a satellite image composite of the Earth with menus and tools around the sides of the screen, with a “Start-up Tips” box blocking the middle of the screen.

Close the “Start-up Tips” box.

3. Search for the Address Where You Want to See a Satellite Image

In the top left corner of the screen, you’ll see a search field.

Start entering the address of the house (or any other building!) that you want to see.

Google Earth will offer suggested addresses below the search field as you type. When you see yours, click on it and it will appear in the search box.

Or just type in the full address.

4. Watch as You Zoom to the Location

Once the correct address is in the box, click “Search”. Google Earth will now zoom you to that location.

5. Look for the Orange Pin

An orange pin appears at the address as the image field zooms to the location.

6. Wait Until You Stop Zooming

Still zooming! (Getting closer.)

7. Make Sure the Pin is on the Address You Want

When Google Earth is finished zooming, the image field will be centered on your address and the pin. At this point, it will appear that you are looking down at your house from a few thousand feet.

Every once in a while, Google Earth will glitch, and the pin will not be on the right location.

If you suspect this has happened, you should try entering a different, but very close, address. Like the address next door to the one you want.

If it still takes you to the wrong place, you’ll have to make sure street names, landmarks, and businesses are turned on, and use the context these things provide to hunt down your target location. This happens very rarely, but it does happen.

Check the appropriate boxes in the menu at the bottom left corner in Google Earth.

8. Zoom in Closer with the “Zoom In” Tool

Now you’ll want to get a closer look.

There are two ways you can zoom in: you can use the zoom tool near the top right corner of the image field, or you can just scroll with your mouse wheel.

If you scroll with the mouse wheel, you have to make sure that the mouse pointer is inside the general image field.

Note: The zoom tool (and the rotate tool above it) might not appear in the top right corner of the image field for you at first. If this is the case, in the menu bar on the top left, click on “View”, then click “Show Navigation”, then check the box for “Automatically”.

9. Limit to How Close You Can Get with Google Earth

The picture below is about as close as you can get without severely changing the viewing angle.

If you try to get too close, you’ll switch over into “Street View”.

If that happened to you, keep reading to see how to get the view back to where you’re looking straight down.

10. Center the Building in the Viewing Field

If your house isn’t centered in the image field, you can grab any spot in the image and drag it around.

To center the image field on your house, put the mouse pointer (which turns into a little hand when it’s inside the image field) on your house and hold down the left mouse button.

This lets you drag the house to the center of the image field.

Centered!

11. Remove the Pin and the Address From the Viewing Field

If the orange pin and the address text are sitting right on your house, as in our picture, you can remove them by clicking the “X” to clear the search results box.

12. Reset the Viewing Angle for the Image

If the image is tilted so that it looks like you’re viewing your house at an angle, which can be irritating, you can fix this.

The “Reset” function lets you reset the viewing angle.

At the top left, click on “View”. This opens a drop-down menu. Near the end of the drop-down menu, click on “Reset”. This opens another little menu to the right. Click on “Tilt”, and your view of your house will go back to where you’re looking straight down.

Back to a straight down view!

13. Rotate the Image

You can also rotate the image if you want to.

Put the mouse pointer on the “N” on the little circle in the top right of the screen, hold down the left mouse button, and drag the “N” around the little circle.

Clicking the left and right arrows inside the circle will also rotate the image.

14. Turn “3D Buildings” On and Off

Your building may be in an area covered by Google Earth’s 3D Buildings function.

If it is, you may see buildings which just look like featureless geometric shapes. You don’t want that!

You can turn off the 3D Buildings function by unchecking the box next to “3D Buildings” in the “Layers” menu near the bottom left of the screen.

Same view as above, but with “3D Buildings” turned off:

FINISHED.


About the Author

Jack Gray is a principal roof consultant and vice president at the Moriarty Corporation, an award-winning building enclosure consultant firm founded in 1967. He is also the editor of the Roof Online website.

Mr. Gray has worked in the roofing industry for over 25 years, with training and practical experience in roof installation, roof inspection, roof safety, roof condition assessment, construction estimating, roof design & specification, quality assurance, roof maintenance & repair, and roof asset management.

He was awarded the Registered Roof Observer (RRO) professional credential in 2009.

He also served as an infantry paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne Division and attended Cornell University. Read full bio.