Free tool

EUDR Geolocation Tool

Capture the geolocation of your plot in the exact format the EUDR requires. Search your land on a satellite map, drop a point or draw the boundary as a polygon, and export WGS84 coordinates to six decimal places as GeoJSON or CSV. A point works for small plots; a polygon is required for any plot larger than 4 hectares.

What the EUDR requires

Geolocation of every plot: GPS coordinates of the land where it was produced, a single point for small plots and a polygon (the plot boundary) for any plot larger than 4 hectares. Regulation (EU) 2023/1115, Art. 2(28) defines geolocation as latitude and longitude to at least six decimal digits, with polygons for plots over 4 hectares. Regulation (EU) 2023/1115, Art. 2(28)

Address search powered by OpenStreetMap (Nominatim).

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Your EUDR coordinates

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Drop a point or draw a polygon on the map. The EUDR-ready coordinates will appear here, formatted to six decimal places.

Coordinates are WGS84 decimal degrees. This tool helps you capture geolocation; you are responsible for accuracy. This is guidance, not legal advice.

Step by step

How to use it

From a blank map to export-ready coordinates in five steps.

  1. 1

    Search your address

    Type your address, farm name or nearest town and pick the right match to fly the map to your land.

  2. 2

    Switch to satellite

    The map opens in satellite view so you can see field boundaries, tree lines and buildings. Toggle to the street map if it helps you orient.

  3. 3

    Drop a point or draw the polygon boundary

    For a small plot, drop a single point. For a plot of 4 hectares or more, draw the full boundary as a polygon by clicking each corner.

  4. 4

    Check the area

    The tool shows the approximate area of each polygon in hectares and reminds you when a polygon is required.

  5. 5

    Copy or download the coordinates

    Copy the WGS84 coordinates to six decimal places, or download a GeoJSON or CSV file ready to file or send to your buyer.

In short

The EUDR needs the geolocation of each plot in WGS84 decimal degrees to at least six places. Use a single point for plots under 4 hectares; for anything 4 hectares or larger, draw the plot boundary as a polygon. This tool captures both and exports them ready to file or to send to your buyer.

Geolocation questions people ask

Point or polygon?

A single point (one latitude and one longitude) is acceptable only for plots smaller than 4 hectares. For any plot of 4 hectares or more you must provide a polygon, meaning the full boundary of the plot drawn as a closed ring of coordinates. If in doubt, draw the polygon, as it is always acceptable.

What format does the EUDR require?

Geolocation as latitude and longitude in decimal degrees to at least six decimal places, for example -1.234567, 36.789012. This tool always formats to six decimals. A point is given as one coordinate pair; a polygon is given as a closed ring of coordinate pairs.

What coordinate system?

WGS84, the global standard used by GPS and by the EU Information System. Avoid degrees-minutes-seconds and avoid local or national grid references, which must be converted to WGS84 decimal degrees first. Everything this tool exports is already WGS84 decimal degrees.

Is satellite imagery accurate enough?

Satellite imagery is good for locating and outlining a plot, and for most plots it is accurate enough to capture a usable boundary. For high-value or contested plots, or where the imagery is old or cloudy, verify on the ground with a GPS device. You remain responsible for the accuracy of the coordinates you submit.

Next steps

This is guidance to help you capture EUDR geolocation, not legal advice. You are responsible for the accuracy of the coordinates you submit. For decisions specific to your business, confirm with the official sources we link or a qualified adviser.

Sources

  1. [1]Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 (EUDR), Art. 2(28), on EUR-Lexretrieved 5 Jun 2026
  2. [2]European Commission, EUDR implementation and Information Systemretrieved 5 Jun 2026

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