USNG Info Center

Your comprehensive resource for understanding, using, and teaching the U.S. National Grid

Our Mission: The USNG Information Center serves as the premier education and training resource for understanding and implementing the U.S. National Grid. We provide the knowledge, tools, and resources that enable organizations and individuals to effectively use USNG for improved location referencing and emergency response. We address a critical problem: every American is vulnerable to delays in emergency response when personnel have difficulty locating an incident site due to poor communication of "where."

What is the U.S. National Grid?

The U.S. National Grid (USNG) is a coordinate system designed for situations where precise and efficient location communication is a matter of life and death. With just 8 digits, a location can be pinpointed to within 10 meters in an area of 62×62 miles.

Adopted by the Federal Geographic Data Committee in 2001, USNG is based on the Military Grid Reference System (MGRS) that the U.S. Department of Defense and NATO partners developed in the late 1940s. After WWII combat operations revealed that latitude/longitude coordinates were problematic in urgent response situations, military planners devised a system teachable to an individual with an 8th grade education in 15 minutes.

USNG addresses the limitations of latitude/longitude: it uses measurements that are easier to estimate on maps, requires shorter communication transmissions that are less likely to be misspoken or misheard, and directly correlates to distances on the ground. The system works seamlessly with GPS and is more intuitive for individuals without formal navigation training. USNG has become the recognized "emergency response language of location" for the United States.

How USNG Works

USNG coordinates consist of three components that work together to pinpoint any location:

15T VK 8720 7790

Grid Zone (15T)

6° × 8° area covering most of Minnesota and Iowa

100 km Square (VK)

100 km × 100 km area (≈ 62×62 miles)

Easting & Northing (8720 7790)

8 digits = 10 m accuracy within the 100 km square

This coordinate identifies the headquarters of the USNG Info Center in St. Paul, MN

This example identifies a location accurate to within 10 meters. Add more digits for even greater precision, or use fewer digits for broader areas.

What We Offer

  • Comprehensive training materials for all skill levels
  • Technical implementation resources for GIS professionals
  • Operational guidance for emergency services
  • Software tools and data resources
  • Ongoing support through the USNG Institute
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Who We Serve

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General Public

Hikers, outdoor enthusiasts, and citizens learning standardized grid referencing for personal safety in areas without addresses.

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GIS Professionals

Technical professionals implementing USNG in mapping systems, CAD systems, and spatial databases for emergency operations

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Emergency Services

First responders, dispatchers, and emergency managers using USNG operationally for incident location and mutual aid coordination

Key Characteristics

✓ Simple

Easy-to-use alphanumeric coordinates that anyone can learn

✓ Accurate

Scalable precision from broad areas to 10-meter accuracy for emergencies

✓ Universal

Works everywhere in the United States and territories

✓ Standardized

Federal Geographic Data Committee approved standard

✓ Device-Independent

Can be used without electronic equipment

✓ Seamless

Crosses jurisdictional boundaries without conversion

History of USNG

1940s
Origins of MGRS

After WWII, the U.S. Defense Mapping Agency and NATO organizations determined that latitude/longitude was problematic when precise and efficient location communication was a matter of life and death. The Military Grid Reference System (MGRS) was developed for NATO forces to coordinate operations across international boundaries.

1998
Proposal to FGDC

The Public XY Mapping Project, a grassroots citizen effort, brought the USNG standard to the Federal Geographic Data Committee after conducting informal tests to determine which coordinate system best met requirements for national consistency and ease of human use.

December 2001
Federal Adoption

After a series of significant hurricanes devastated the U.S. Southeast in the 1990s, the need for standardized location communication became apparent. FGDC officially adopted USNG as federal standard FGDC-STD-011-2001.

2001–2010
Post-Disaster Recognition

After-action reports from Hurricane Katrina and other disasters identified a national grid as critical for mutual aid responders arriving from different parts of the country.

May 2009
FEMA Guidance

FEMA issued memo to establish USNG standard for operational maps.

2011
National SAR Standard

National Search and Rescue Committee designated USNG as the primary coordinate reference system for all land-based search and rescue activities in the United States.

2012–2015
ELM Program Begins

Emergency Location Markers (ELMs) translate USNG principles into practical field application. After thorough testing with recreational users, responders, and geospatial experts, ELMs were deployed in Minnesota, Iowa, and Florida.

October 2015
FEMA Directive

FEMA issued Directive 092-5 establishing USNG as official standard for operations.

2015–Present
ELM Expansion

USNG Emergency Location Marker programs expand to Georgia, Hawaii, Michigan, and additional states, placing standardized grid markers on trails and in remote areas.

2022–Present
USNG Institute

USNG Institute is established by a national working group of concerned citizens. Early years are devoted to building administrative and operational structures. Promotion, outreach and dialogue with industry commenced mid-2025.

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