Geodetic Standards Comparison

ISO, OGC, NGA. Choosing the wrong standard isn't just a technical error; it's a contract breach. Verify your compliance.

How to Use

Identify the controlling authority for your project type below.

Online Tool

1. Global Civil Standards (ISO / OGC)

Primary Use: Civil Engineering, Web Mapping, Interoperability.

  • ISO 19111: The theoretical basis. Defines how a CRS must be described.
  • OGC WKT: The "Well-Known Text" format used to store CRS in databases (PostGIS, Shapefiles).
  • Audit Requirement: Ensure your WKT string exactly matches the OGC definition.

2. Military & Defense (NGA)

Primary Use: NATO operations, Aviation, Maritime.

  • Standard: WGS84 (World Geodetic System 1984).
  • Key Difference: NGA standards prioritize global consistency for navigation over local cadastral accuracy.
  • Risk: Mixing NGA coordinates with local high-precision survey data without transformation.
⚠️ Datum Hazard: Read Before Conversion

Coordinate values only have meaning when attached to a Datum.

  • WGS84: Standard for GPS, Google Maps, Web Mercator.
  • NAD27: Used in older USGS topographic maps (pre-1983).

Using the wrong datum can shift your position by 20-100+ meters. Always verify the source datum of your coordinates.

Use Cases

FAQ

Q: What is the difference between ISO 19111 and OGC?

A: ISO 19111 defines the abstract model for referencing by coordinates. OGC implements this model in practical standards like WKT and GML.

Q: Does the NGS (USA) follow global standards?

A: Yes, modern systems like NAD83 (2011) are aligned with ITRS but have specific plate-velocity models different from WGS84.

Q: Which standard covers EPSG codes?

A: The EPSG Dataset is maintained by IOGP (International Association of Oil & Gas Producers), the de facto industry standard.

Professional Verification Disclaimer

This content is provided for decision-support and educational purposes for geospatial professionals and does not constitute legal, surveying, or engineering advice. Regulations and official standards vary by jurisdiction and project scope. Information is based on publicly available standards as of January 11, 2026. For critical projects, always verify current requirements with:

Reference: Professional Use & Scope

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