π‘ Maidenhead Locator (QTH Locator)
What is the Maidenhead Locator?
The Maidenhead Locator (also called QTH Locator) is a globally used coordinate system in amateur radio.
It is used to quickly and uniquely specify the location of a radio stationβwithout long GPS coordinates.

π Practical example
DL4KER locator:
π JN48LS
This means:
- JN = Central Europe
- 48 = large grid aquare (approx. 100 km)
- LS = fine grid (very precise position within the region)
Why is this important in amateur radio?

The locator is used for:
π‘ Long-distance radio contacts (DX)
π°οΈ Contests and competitions
πΆ Radio path and distance calculations
π Worldwide location identification
Structure of the Maidenhead system
The locator consists of multiple levels:
1. Field
2 letters β e.g. JN
Coarse geographic region
2. Square
2 digits β e.g. JN48
Region within ~100 km
3. Subsquare
2 letters β e.g. JN48LS
More precise position (~a few km)
example: DL4ker locator JN48LS

Example: DL4KER locator JN48LS
The locator JN48LS shows the exact radio position within the European grid.
This allows other radio amateurs worldwide to:
- determine your approximate location
- calculate distances
- plan antenna directions
What is it used for?
π Amateur radio contests
π‘ DX (long-distance contacts)
π Logbook entries
π Radio maps & statistics tools
Conclusion
The Maidenhead Locator is a simple but extremely effective system in amateur radio.
