In this comprehensive tutorial, we'll master the configuration of label styles for station elevation labels—a critical skill for maintaining professional drawing standards in Civil 3D. The process begins by navigating to the familiar workspace we've used in previous lessons, ensuring consistency in our workflow approach.

Access the Settings tab within your Tool Space window, then navigate to the Profile View section. Expand this node to reveal the Label Styles category, which serves as the foundation for all labeling customization in Civil 3D. Within Label Styles, locate and expand the Station Elevation subcategory to view your available options.

Upon expansion, you'll notice two distinct styles: Standard and Station Elevation. The golden triangle icon adjacent to one of these styles serves as a visual indicator that this particular label style is actively being used within your current drawing. Since only one triangle appears, we can confidently identify which style controls our station elevation labels. This visual cue system helps maintain clarity when managing multiple label styles across complex projects.

Right-click on the active station elevation label style and select Edit to launch the Label Style Composer. This powerful dialog box serves as your command center for all label customization, offering granular control over every aspect of label appearance and behavior.

The Information tab provides essential metadata including the style name, creator details, and space for custom descriptions. While this information becomes crucial when creating new label styles for team collaboration, our current focus involves modifying existing parameters rather than building from scratch.

Navigate to the General tab, which houses universal settings applicable across all Civil 3D label styles. Here you'll find critical parameters including text style selection, label visibility controls, layer assignments, orientation references, forced insertion options, plan readability settings, readability bias adjustments, and flip anchor behaviors. These foundational settings ensure your labels maintain consistency with your organization's CAD standards and remain legible across various drawing scales and orientations.


The Layout tab represents the heart of label customization, offering four primary component types: text, line, blocks, and reference text. For station elevation labels, we typically work with a single text component that dynamically displays both station and elevation values. This streamlined approach maintains clarity while providing essential survey information.

Within the text component settings, you'll encounter familiar parameters including name designation, visibility toggles, anchor component relationships, and anchor point specifications. Additional controls govern content formatting, text height, rotation angles, attachment methods, X and Y offset values, color assignments, line weights, maximum width constraints, and comprehensive border options. These settings mirror those found in other label styles, ensuring a consistent user experience across different label types.

The Contents field deserves special attention, as it defines the actual information displayed within your label. Station elevation labels require specific text formatting codes that differ significantly from other label types, such as depth labels covered in previous tutorials. Click the ellipsis button to access the Text Component Editor, where you can modify display properties and formatting options.

For our current objectives, the existing station and elevation content configuration meets professional requirements, so we'll proceed without modifications. Click OK to preserve these settings and advance to the Drag State configuration.

The Drag State tab controls label appearance when users reposition labels away from their default locations—a common requirement in congested drawing areas. Key parameters include arrowhead style selection, arrowhead sizing, visibility controls, leader line types and weights, and component display options. You'll also find display format controls offering choices between stacked text and compressed formats, depending on your drawing's spatial constraints.


One critical improvement involves modifying the Border Visibility setting. While the default configuration sets this parameter to False, enabling border visibility significantly enhances label readability, particularly in busy drawing environments. Change this setting to True and select Rectangular for the border type, while maintaining the background mask setting as False to preserve drawing clarity. This combination provides optimal text definition without overwhelming the surrounding drawing elements.

The Summary tab offers an alternative interface for reviewing and adjusting all previously configured settings. This consolidated view proves particularly valuable for final quality checks and minor adjustments. You can expand individual categories—such as the Drag State Component—and modify specific parameters like border visibility directly within this interface, providing workflow flexibility for different user preferences.

Apply your changes and click OK to implement the updated label style configuration. The immediate visual feedback in your drawing confirms successful implementation, with station elevation labels now displaying the enhanced border formatting in drag state conditions. This professional presentation standard ensures your drawings maintain clarity and readability across various project phases and client presentations.

Save your work to preserve these label style improvements, ensuring consistency across future drawing sessions and maintaining your customized standards for upcoming projects.