
Ordnance Survey map symbols
15 June 2009
Maps are crammed full of information. Not only do they show you the routes and types of road or path, they detail millions of points of interest and landmarks. Writing the name of each of these onto an Ordnance Survey map would be totally impractical as the map would become terribly cluttered and unreadable. Instead, we use standardised map symbols to represent features on the ground. Windmills, schools, woods, battle sites, nature reserves and golf courses all have their own individual symbol, as do hundreds of other features.
These symbols are shown on the legend of each paper map; depending on the scale, the same symbols may not be shown on each Ordnance Survey map, as different scales show varying levels of detail.
As a quick-reference guide, you can download the following guides to map symbols (pdf documents).
- 1:25 000 scale Explorer™ England & Scotland (PDF 1MB)
- 1:25 000 scale Explorer™ Welsh version (PDF 390KB)
- 1:50 000 scale Landranger® English version (PDF 321KB)
- 1:50 000 scale Landranger® Welsh version (PDF 433KB)
- Abbreviations used on 1:25 000 and 1:50 scale maps (PDF 45KB)
- 1:25 000 scale Explorer additional symbols (PDF 267KB)
Visit the Ordnance Survey map shop to put your map symbol knowledge into practice!
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