Home → Minecraft → How to make a map
Minecraft
How to Make a Map in Minecraft
Updated April 2026 · 2 min read
⚡ Quick Answer
Craft a map with 8 Paper + 1 Compass in a crafting table — Paper from Sugar Cane (3 per craft), Compass from 4 Iron Ingots + 1 Redstone Dust. Hold the map and move around to fill it in. The default map covers a 128×128 block area. Expand it up to 4 times at a Cartography Table to cover larger areas, up to 2048×2048 blocks at zoom level 4. Maps become much more useful once you start finding villages in Minecraft and tracking explored areas.
Step by Step
1
Gather Sugar Cane and craft Paper. Sugar Cane grows naturally near water. Place 3 Sugar Cane in a horizontal row in a crafting table to get 3 Paper. You need 8 Paper per map, so collect at least 9 Sugar Cane for one crafting session. Farming Sugar Cane next to water on your base guarantees a permanent supply.
2
Craft a Compass. Place 1 Redstone Dust in the center of the crafting grid with 4 Iron Ingots above, below, left, and right. Redstone is found underground from Y 0 to Y -64. The Compass is required for the map to show your position as a white dot.
3
Craft the Map. Fill all 8 outer slots of the crafting table with Paper and place the Compass in the center. This creates an Empty Map. Right-click or use the item to activate it — it starts filling in as you walk around the area.
4
Expand the map at a Cartography Table. Craft a Cartography Table with 2 Paper + 4 Wood Planks. Place your filled map and 1 Paper in the table to zoom out one level — the map now covers a larger area but with less detail. Repeat up to 4 times for maximum coverage.
5
Add the map to an Item Frame to display it on a wall. Place an Item Frame (1 Leather + 8 Sticks) on any wall and right-click it with the map to mount it. Multiple maps in adjacent frames create a seamless large map display — a great way to track explored territory from your base, especially when searching for structures like a Stronghold in Minecraft.
Tips
→
Maps don’t update automatically once placed in an Item Frame — you need to hold the map and walk the new area to fill in unexplored sections, then re-place it in the frame to see the update.
→
Clone maps at the Cartography Table using a map + empty map — gives you an identical copy. Useful for sharing with other players in multiplayer or keeping a backup before exploring dangerous areas.
→
Banner markers can be added to maps — right-click any placed Banner with your map to mark its location with a colored icon and custom name. Ideal for marking your base, villages, strongholds, and other key locations while searching for Ancient Cities in Minecraft.
→
The Locator Map (Java Edition) shows other players’ positions as colored dots — in Bedrock, all maps show player positions by default. In multiplayer this makes maps far more useful for coordination.
More Minecraft guides