Chess notation is the standard way to accurately record moves. Algebraic notation is used everywhere: clear, concise and universal.
The Board and Coordinates
The chessboard has a clear coordinate system that allows you to precisely identify any square:
Files:labeled with letters from a to h (left to right, from White's perspective)
Ranks:labeled with numbers from 1 to 8 (bottom to top, from White's perspective)
Example: Square e4 means file e and rank 4
a8
b8
c8
d8
e8
f8
g8
h8
a7
b7
c7
d7
e7
f7
g7
h7
a6
b6
c6
d6
e6
f6
g6
h6
a5
b5
c5
d5
e5
f5
g5
h5
a4
b4
c4
d4
e4
f4
g4
h4
a3
b3
c3
d3
e3
f3
g3
h3
a2
b2
c2
d2
e2
f2
g2
h2
a1
b1
c1
d1
e1
f1
g1
h1
Chess Coordinates Game
Practice recognizing chessboard coordinates. Click on the indicated square!
Find:e4
Score: 0
Piece Symbols
Piece
Letter
Example
King
K
Ke2 (king moves to e2)
Queen
Q
Qd5 (queen moves to d5)
Bishop
B
Bc4 (bishop moves to c4)
Knight
N
Nf3 (knight moves to f3)
Rook
R
Rd1 (rook moves to d1)
Pawn
(none)
e4 (pawn moves to e4)
Important: Pawns are not marked with a letter – just the square is written (e.g., e4).
International Letters (English)
In international games and software, English letters are commonly used:
Piece
Local
English
Example
King
K
K (King)
Ke2
Queen
Q
Q (Queen)
Qd5
Bishop
B
B (Bishop)
Bc4
Knight
N
N (Knight)
Nf3
Rook
R
R (Rook)
Rd1
Recording Moves
Standard format: piece + square
Nf3 – knight moves to f3 Bc4 – bishop moves to c4 e4 – pawn moves to e4
Captures
Indicated with the letter x:
Qxe5 – queen captures the piece on e5 Rxf7 – rook captures the piece on f7 exd5 – pawn from the e-file captures on d5
Check and Checkmate
Symbol
Meaning
Example
+
Check
Qd8+ (queen gives check)
#
Checkmate
Qf7# (queen delivers checkmate)
Castling
0-0 – kingside castling (with the h-file rook)
0-0-0 – queenside castling (with the a-file rook)
Pawn Promotion
When a pawn reaches the opposite end of the board, you indicate which piece it promotes to:
e8Q – pawn promotes to a queen h1N – pawn promotes to a knight
Additional Symbols
When two pieces can move to the same square
The starting file or rank is specified:
Rae1 – rook from the a-file moves to e1 N5d4 – knight from the 5th rank moves to d4 Qhxh7 – queen from the h-file captures on h7
Game Result
Symbol
Result
1-0
White wins
0-1
Black wins
½-½
Draw
Example Game
Here is what a game looks like recorded using algebraic notation:
Practical Tips
Good to Know!
Chess notation is a universal language, the same worldwide. Once you learn it, you can read games recorded in any country, participate in international tournaments and analyze classic master games.