If you’ve ever typed “longitude and latitude Atlanta Georgia” into a map app or search bar, you’re really asking:
Where is Atlanta on the globe, and why do those numbers matter to me here in the city?
Here’s a clear, Atlanta-focused guide.
The approximate central coordinates of the City of Atlanta are:
In many mapping tools, you’ll see it written as:
These coordinates roughly point to Downtown Atlanta, close to landmarks like the Georgia State Capitol and the Five Points area.
To make sense of Atlanta’s coordinates:
Latitude (33.7490° N)
Longitude (84.3880° W)
In short, latitude tells you “north–south,” longitude tells you “east–west.”
Different parts of Atlanta have slightly different coordinates, but they all stay close to that 33.7° N, 84.4° W range.
Here’s a simple reference for some familiar spots:
| Location | Latitude (N) | Longitude (W) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Downtown Atlanta (central) | ~33.7490° | ~84.3880° | Near Georgia State Capitol |
| Hartsfield–Jackson ATL Airport | ~33.6407° | ~84.4277° | South of downtown |
| Midtown Atlanta | ~33.7887° | ~84.3841° | Around Peachtree St & 10th St |
| Buckhead (Lenox area) | ~33.8487° | ~84.3589° | North Atlanta business/shopping |
| Georgia Tech (main campus) | ~33.7756° | ~84.3963° | West of Midtown |
| Georgia State University | ~33.7529° | ~84.3869° | In the heart of downtown |
These numbers are approximate, but close enough for most navigation and planning.
You might not think about latitude and longitude daily, but they quietly power a lot of what you do around the city.
Most navigation apps use GPS coordinates under the hood. Knowing or using them can help when:
Many apps let you:
Atlanta’s 33.7° N latitude affects:
Many weather apps use your exact coordinates in Atlanta (not just your ZIP code) to give more precise forecasts, especially useful if you live in one part of the metro area and work in another.
Coordinates can matter for city services and planning, especially around Atlanta:
While you won’t usually need to recite your latitude/longitude to an Atlanta agency, it helps to know that’s how they often locate and manage city resources.
If you need the latitude and longitude for a specific address or place in Atlanta, here are easy options:
On most major map apps:
This works well for:
On a desktop or laptop with a mapping website:
While latitude and longitude is the standard for global navigation, Atlanta-area professionals sometimes use other coordinate systems for technical work:
For everyday use—directions, travel, property address lookups—you only need latitude and longitude, but if you work with survey documents, plats, or engineering plans in the Atlanta area, you may encounter these other systems.
Atlanta is located in the Eastern Time Zone (ET), and its longitude (~84.4° W) helps define that placement.
Locally, this means:
This can be helpful if you’re:
While most people use street addresses, many Atlanta-based institutions operate with very precise maps and coordinates for planning, safety, and logistics. Some examples:
Atlanta City Hall
Fulton County Government Center
Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency (GEMA/HS) – offices serving metro Atlanta
Even if you never see the numbers, your city services, utilities, and emergency systems are heavily dependent on Atlanta’s geographic coordinates.
Here’s a compact summary you can save or jot down:
If you live in Atlanta, visit often, or just need to plug your city into GPS tools or planning apps, these are the core latitude and longitude values you’ll use.
