Gaia. and followed by avenza, back country navigator, my trails, alpine maps and a slew of others. Try several of them for free from google and/or itunes and you can upgrade the ones you like for 5 to 20 bucks.
I also went with a non connected tablet that does not have gps when no wifi. I have a garmibn glo that I connect to through bluetooth. works for me and I favor gaia (upgraded). YMMV!
I think I'm going to purchase GAIA GPS over the weekend. But I want to backup and delete a ton of photos and videos I have on my iPhone to make room before I do that. That will give me room to download maps for offline use.
One advantage to an Android tab is most all of them allow for micro SD cards for expanded storage and /or separate data bases for maps unlike the Apple products that have fixed storage.food for thought. I have been using a 7 inch tab and it suits my aging eyes.
"Roadside" (by RoadsideAmerica.com) is a very handy app for road-tripping. It tells you about cool things to see nearby. It's $3 (which includes one region). Access to all regions is another $6. Well worth it!
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