How Accurate Is MGRS? (Military Grid Reference System Precision)

The precision of an MGRS coordinate is determined by the number of digits in the easting and northing pair. A 10-digit MGRS coordinate (5 digits each for easting and northing) locates a point within a 1-metre square. A 6-digit coordinate locates a 100-metre square. The theoretical maximum precision of MGRS is 1 cm (with explicit sub-metre coordinates), though this exceeds normal military and surveying use cases.

📐 MGRS Precision Table

Format: [Grid Zone][100km Square][Easting][Northing]

4-digit: MGRS = [Zone][Square] [EE] [NN] → 1,000 m precision
6-digit: MGRS = [Zone][Square] [EEE] [NNN] → 100 m precision
8-digit: MGRS = [Zone][Square] [EEEE] [NNNN] → 10 m precision
10-digit: MGRS = [Zone][Square] [EEEEE] [NNNNN] → 1 m precision

📊 Reference Table

MGRS DigitsExamplePrecision (Square Size)Typical Use
4-digit18S UJ 23 061,000 m × 1,000 mLarge-scale tactical planning
6-digit18S UJ 234 064100 m × 100 mStandard military operations
8-digit18S UJ 2348 064710 m × 10 mArtillery/precision navigation
10-digit18S UJ 23480 064701 m × 1 mEngineering, EOD, survey control
12-digit18S UJ 234800 0647000.1 m × 0.1 mHigh-precision survey (non-standard)

⚠️ Engineering Consequences

MGRS precision errors are common and can be catastrophic in the wrong context:

Use MGRS Precision Decoder Tool →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is MGRS always WGS84?

Modern NATO/US military MGRS grids are based on WGS84. However, topographic maps printed before the mid-1990s may contain MGRS grids based on local datums such as NAD27 or ED50. Using a modern GPS MGRS output to navigate on an old paper map without checking the datum can produce errors of 10–200 metres.

What happens if I read an MGRS grid square letter wrong?

MGRS uses two letters to identify a 100,000-metre square within the grid zone. A single letter error — e.g., reading 'UJ' as 'VJ' — would shift the location by exactly one 100 km square (100,000 metres) in the east-west direction. This is one of the most operationally dangerous single-character errors in geospatial data handling.

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Professional Risk Notice

Using the wrong datum or applying coordinates without grid-to-ground correction can cause 1–400 metre positional errors — a leading cause of surveying negligence claims and contract disputes.

📋 See Legal Cases ($25K–$10M) → 📝 Contract Datum Risk → ⚙️ Calculate My Exposure →