Hi Robert, I'm not entirely sure I understand what you're asking, so please set me straight if I've got it wrong, but I think you want to have a UIView displayed above the AGSMapView and you want it active (i.e. the user can interact with it) only some of the time? Take a look at this post. You could set the userInteractionEnabled property of the UIView displayed above the map to control whether it traps UI events or not. Set it to NO and the events pass right on through to the map. Again, apologies if I've misunderstood. Let me know. Cheers, Nick. Nick, That post and solution seems to address ignoring the touch events on the overlay, not the capture of them. For my testing I placed the UIView above the map view allowing some of the map to be exposed. When I touch inside the UIView I get an acknowledgement of the touch from the underlying view of the view controller (I placed an NSLog at that level to acknowledge the event), but the map does not respond, but neither does the UIView. When I move over to the map view I get complete interaction as expected. This overlay class in a standalone view controller works as as expected. My view hierarchy is as follows: overlay UIView - custom UIView class AGSMapview - standard map view class view controller UIView - customer UIViewController class. I need to toggle the overlay in and out of view and touch interaction. The User Interaction Enabled is set for the overlay field and toggling the hidden status of the view removes it from the touch hierarchy as expected. I hope this clears things up. Rob
... View more