How to Read MGRS Coordinates: A Step-by-Step Guide
The Military Grid Reference System (MGRS) is the geocoordinate standard used by NATO militaries, Search and Rescue teams, and disaster relief organizations. It is designed to be highly readable on paper maps and easy to transmit over voice radio.
18S UJ 2345 0645This translates to: Zone 18S, Square UJ, 23,450 meters East, 6,450 meters North.
Step 1: The Grid Zone Designator (GZD)
The first part of an MGRS block is a number and a letter, such as 18S.
- The Number (1-60): Identifies the UTM longitude zone, each 6 degrees wide.
- The Letter (C-X): Identifies the latitude band, each 8 degrees high. (Letters I and O are skipped to avoid confusion with numbers 1 and 0).
If you only have `18S`, you have designated a giant box roughly the size of a US state (e.g., covering parts of Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania).
Step 2: The 100km Square Identifier
The next two letters, such as UJ, identify a 100km by 100km square within the Grid Zone.
- The first letter (U) identifies the column (easting).
- The second letter (J) identifies the row (northing).
With `18S UJ`, you have narrowed the location down to a specific 100 kilometer square on Earth. This is the absolute minimum required to know roughly what city or county an operation is in.
Step 3: The Numerical Grid Reference
The remaining string consists of an even number of digits (4, 6, 8, or 10). You split these digits exactly in half. The first half is the Easting (reading right), and the second half is the Northing (reading up). Remember the phrase: "Read Right, Then Up."
Example: An 8-Digit Grid (10-meter accuracy)
Let's use 23450645.
Split it in half: East 2345, North 0645.
- 2345 means you move 23,450 meters east from the left edge of the 100km square UJ.
- 0645 means you move 6,450 meters north from the bottom edge of the 100km square UJ.
03450645, you must keep the zero. Dropping it creates an odd number of digits (7), making it impossible to split evenly. The system will fail.
Precision Breakdown
The number of digits tells you the size of the target box:
- 4 digits (`23 06`): Locates a 1,000m x 1,000m square (1 km).
- 6 digits (`234 064`): Locates a 100m x 100m square. Standard for infantry.
- 8 digits (`2345 0645`): Locates a 10m x 10m square. Standard for artillery and extraction.
- 10 digits (`23456 06456`): Locates a 1m x 1m square. Needs high-end GPS.
Practicing your coordinate reading? Check your work by converting MGRS to a point on a digital map.
→ MGRS to Latitude/Longitude ConverterCommon Errors to Watch For
- Radio Transcription: Confusing the letters "M" and "N" over static. Use the phonetic alphabet (e.g., "Mike Novmeber") for the 100km square.
- Wrong Datum: A map using a European 1950 datum will generate a completely different MGRS coordinate for a physical location than a modern WGS84 GPS receiver. MGRS requires datum parity.
FAQ
Why does MGRS skip the letters I and O?
Because the letter 'I' looks like the number '1', and the letter 'O' looks like the number '0'. Skipping them prevents deadly targeting or navigation mix-ups.
Can I just use my phone's GPS for MGRS?
Most smartphone compass or GPS apps can output MGRS. However, a phone's typical accuracy is 3-5 meters. A phone outputting a 10-digit (1-meter precision) MGRS coordinate is generating false precision.
What does "Read Right, Then Up" mean?
When finding a point on a paper map using a grid square protractor, you always read the Easting (moving to the right across the map) first, and then the Northing (moving up the map) second.
See also: MGRS Precision Levels | MGRS Letter Error Case Study | Lat/Long to MGRS Tool
US State Plane (SPCS) Converters & Local Guides
Professional engineering and surveying transformations from state-specific conformal grids to GPS WGS84.
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.