Antipode Calculator - Find Earth's Opposite Point
Find the exact point on Earth directly opposite any location by entering its latitude and longitude coordinates.
Enter decimal-degree latitude and longitude to instantly compute the antipodal coordinates and great-circle distance.
Antipode Calculator - Find Earth's Opposite Point
Find the exact point on Earth directly opposite any location by entering its latitude and longitude coordinates.
−90 (South Pole) to +90 (North Pole)
−180 to +180, positive = East
About the Antipode Calculator
An antipode is the point on Earth that is diametrically opposite a given location. If you could drill a perfectly straight tunnel through the centre of the Earth from your current position, the exit point on the other side of the globe is your antipode. The word comes from the Greek "antipous" meaning "opposite feet" — the idea that someone standing on the antipodal point would be standing perfectly upside-down relative to you.
Computing the antipode of a point is mathematically straightforward using spherical-coordinate geometry. Given a location at latitude φ and longitude λ (both in decimal degrees), the antipodal latitude is simply −φ, which reflects the point through the equatorial plane. The antipodal longitude is λ + 180° if λ ≤ 0°, or λ − 180° if λ > 0°, which rotates the meridian exactly halfway around the globe. The result is always normalised to the standard range: latitude in [−90°, +90°] and longitude in (−180°, +180°].
An interesting geographic fact is that the vast majority of Earth's land masses do not have land-based antipodes. Roughly 71% of Earth's surface is ocean, and since antipodal points are uniformly distributed, most land points correspond to an ocean point on the other side. Notable exceptions include parts of Spain and New Zealand (which are nearly antipodal), southern Argentina and parts of China, and the Iberian Peninsula versus the New Zealand archipelago region.
The distance from any point to its antipode is always half the Earth's great-circle circumference, which is approximately π × 6,371 km ≈ 20,015 km (12,436 miles). This is the maximum possible distance between any two points on Earth's surface, regardless of starting location. The distance does not vary with latitude or longitude because any diameter of a sphere has the same length.
Practical uses for antipode calculations include navigation planning (knowing the antipode helps optimise very long-distance flight routing and satellite ground-track design), seismology (seismic waves from major earthquakes converge at the antipode, sometimes causing detectable secondary tremors), and astronomy (telescope baselines for very-long-baseline interferometry can be maximised by choosing observatories near antipodal locations). Geodetic surveys and satellite positioning systems also use antipodal symmetry to verify coordinate accuracy.
This calculator uses the WGS-84 mean Earth radius of 6,371.0 km for distance calculations, which gives accuracy within ±0.3% for most purposes. Highly precise geodetic work would use an ellipsoidal Earth model, but for educational, travel-planning, and general-interest calculations the spherical model is entirely adequate.
Example Antipodal Points
Click any example to load its coordinates and see the antipode calculated instantly.
| Location | Antipode | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New York City: 40.7128°N, 74.006°W | 40.713°S, 105.994°E (Indian Ocean) | NYC's antipode lies in the southern Indian Ocean, roughly equidistant from southern Africa, Australia, and Antarctica. |
| London: 51.507°N, 0.128°W | 51.507°S, 179.872°E (Pacific Ocean near NZ) | London is nearly antipodal to a point in the Pacific Ocean just west of the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. |
| Tokyo: 35.676°N, 139.650°E | 35.676°S, 40.350°W (South Atlantic) | Tokyo's antipode is in the South Atlantic Ocean at approximately 35°S, 40°W — roughly equidistant from the coasts of Uruguay and South Africa. |
| Sydney: 33.869°S, 151.209°E | 33.869°N, 28.791°W (Atlantic Ocean) | Sydney's antipode is in the North Atlantic Ocean between the Canary Islands and the Azores, near Portugal. |
How to Use the Antipode Calculator
- Enter the latitude of your starting location in decimal degrees. Positive values indicate North (e.g. 40.7128 for NYC), negative values indicate South (e.g. −33.8688 for Sydney).
- Enter the longitude in decimal degrees. Positive values indicate East (e.g. 139.65 for Tokyo), negative values indicate West (e.g. −74.006 for NYC).
- Click Calculate Antipode. The calculator displays the antipodal latitude, longitude, and the distance between the two points.
- Use the example buttons to quickly load famous city coordinates and see their antipodal locations.
- To convert from degrees-minutes-seconds (DMS) format, use the formula: decimal = degrees + minutes/60 + seconds/3600. South and West are negative.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an antipode?
An antipode is the point on Earth's surface that is exactly opposite a given point, located on the far side of the globe along a straight line passing through Earth's centre. Every location on Earth has exactly one antipode. The antipodal latitude is the negative of the original latitude, and the antipodal longitude differs by exactly 180 degrees.
Is the distance to the antipode always the same?
Yes. The great-circle distance from any point to its antipode is always exactly half of Earth's circumference — approximately 20,015 km or 12,436 miles. This is because the antipode is always diametrically opposite, separated by a diameter of the sphere. The distance is the same no matter where on Earth you start from.
Does any land have a land-based antipode?
Very few locations do. Since about 71% of Earth's surface is ocean, most land areas have ocean antipodes. The main exceptions include parts of Spain and Portugal (nearly antipodal to parts of New Zealand), southern Argentina and the Falkland Islands (antipodal to central China and Mongolia), and Hawaii (antipodal to the Kalahari Desert in Botswana). True land-to-land antipodal pairs are rare.
What coordinate format does this calculator use?
This calculator uses decimal degrees, the most widely used format in digital mapping and GPS systems. Latitude ranges from −90 (South Pole) to +90 (North Pole). Longitude ranges from −180 to +180, with positive values indicating East and negative values indicating West. To convert from degrees-minutes-seconds, add degrees + minutes/60 + seconds/3600 and apply the negative sign for South or West.
Can the antipode of a pole be calculated?
Yes. The antipode of the North Pole (90°N, any longitude) is the South Pole (90°S), and vice versa. These are the only antipodal pairs where the longitude is undefined, because the poles are single points with no meaningful longitude. The calculator handles these edge cases correctly by reflecting the latitude and adjusting longitude by 180°.
Are there practical uses for knowing the antipode?
Antipodes have several practical applications. Seismologists monitor antipodal stations because seismic waves from a major earthquake converge at the antipodal point, producing a measurable signal. Radio engineers designing very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) arrays maximise baseline length by positioning antennas near antipodal sites. In aviation, very long-haul routes occasionally use near-antipodal waypoints to optimise flight paths around the globe.