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You typed your coordinates into Google Maps, and instead of showing a building in New York, you're floating in the middle of the ocean near Antarctica. What went wrong?
Coordinates are just numbers. If you mix up the order, use the wrong format, or miss a negative sign, the map software gets confused. Imagine dialing a phone number but swapping the area code—you won't reach the right person. The same happens with coordinates.
Entering the wrong coordinates isn't just frustrating. In logistics, it means delivering cargo to the wrong state. In search and rescue, a single swapped number can mean searching the wrong side of a mountain range. Precision is critical.
Let's look at the Statue of Liberty: 40.6892 N, 74.0445 W.
In decimal format, West means the number must be negative: 40.6892, -74.0445.
If you forget the minus sign and enter 40.6892, 74.0445, Google Maps puts you in the middle of a lake in Kyrgyzstan, over 6,000 miles away!
Need to convert coordinates instantly? Use our free tool below.
Use Our Auto-Detector Tool →Paste your broken coordinates and we'll figure out what format they are.
Google Maps prefers Decimal Degrees (e.g., 40.7128, -74.0060) or standard DMS. If you are using UTM or MGRS coordinates, Google Maps won't understand them. You must convert them first.
Lat/Long coordinates are usually small numbers between -180 and 180. UTM coordinates are huge numbers in the millions (e.g., 584384, 4509355) combined with a zone (e.g., 18T).
Coordinate accuracy varies by device and datum. Do not use these results for legal or construction purposes without checking:
GPS Accuracy Alert
Your phone's GPS can be off by 30 meters. This can cause critical errors in your data.
Check My Accuracy →Datum Shift Risk
Using the wrong coordinate system (e.g. WGS84 vs NAD83) creates a permanent 1-meter offset.
Verify My Datum →Try the error simulator. Continue your journey with our precision tools and guides.
Most beginners assume that all latitude/longitude coordinates are the same. However, in North America, the difference between the WGS84 (used by GPS) and NAD83 (used for local surveying) can result in a physical shift of up to 1 meter. For high-precision construction projects, failing to account for this "datum shift" can lead to catastrophic misalignment of foundations or property boundaries.
Tectonic plate movement means that your physical location on Earth is constantly moving relative to the GPS satellite network. In regions like Australia, this drift is significant enough that coordinate reference systems must be updated periodically. Our tools utilize the most stable geodetic algorithms to ensure that your conversions remain mathematically sound across different epochs.