In this comprehensive tutorial, we'll master point marker styles—a fundamental skill for creating professional, consistent drawings. You'll learn to build a custom point marker style from scratch and navigate every tab in the creation interface to understand how each setting impacts your final output.

Let's begin by accessing the point marker style controls. Navigate to the Settings tab in the Toolspace window, then expand the Settings menu. Locate and expand the Points section, followed by Point Styles. Right-click on Point Styles and select "New" to launch the creation interface.

The Point Style dialog opens with the default name "New Point Style"—we'll customize this momentarily. This interface contains five critical tabs that control every aspect of your marker's appearance and behavior.

The Information tab serves as your project documentation hub, housing essential metadata including the style name, description, creator information, and modification timestamps. This documentation becomes invaluable when managing complex projects or collaborating with team members. For our example, I'll rename this style "Spot" since we're creating a marker specifically for spot elevation points that will be applied to Ground Shot points. This naming convention helps maintain organization across large drawing sets.

Moving to the Marker tab, you'll find three primary marker creation methods, each serving distinct professional scenarios. The preview window provides real-time feedback as you make adjustments—a crucial feature for visualizing your final output.

Your marker options include: AutoCAD points (simple but limited), custom markers with predefined geometric shapes (versatile for most applications), and AutoCAD block symbols (essential for complex objects like vegetation or utility symbols). The Marker Rotation Angle setting in the left column allows for dynamic rotation through grip editing or predetermined angle values—particularly useful for directional indicators or aligned symbols.

While custom markers handle most standard surveying and engineering needs, AutoCAD block symbols become essential for specialized objects like trees, utility poles, or equipment symbols that require detailed representation. For our spot elevation example, I'll select "Custom Marker" and choose the "Dot" option, which appears as a clean circle in the preview window.


The marker customization options extend beyond the basic shape. You can layer multiple elements—combining center markers with surrounding shapes like circles or squares to create hierarchical visual systems. This approach helps differentiate point types at a glance, improving drawing readability. For our spot elevation points, I'll use a simple dot without additional surrounds to maintain clarity at various zoom levels.

The right column controls marker scaling—a critical consideration for professional drawings that must read clearly at multiple scales. Your options include drawing scale (maintains proportional sizing across different sheet scales), fixed scale (locks size regardless of drawing scale), absolute units (specified dimensions), and screen-relative sizing (maintains consistent screen appearance). Since consistency with existing points is crucial, I'll maintain the "Use Drawing Scale" setting at 0.1 inches, ensuring our new markers integrate seamlessly with the established drawing standards.

The preview window provides immediate visual feedback, while the Orientation Reference System determines how your marker aligns in space. The World Coordinate System option maintains consistent orientation regardless of view changes, making it the preferred choice for most surveying applications.

The 3D Geometry tab addresses how points display in three-dimensional space—increasingly important as projects incorporate more sophisticated 3D modeling workflows. You can use actual elevation data, flatten all points to a uniform elevation, or apply scale factors for emphasis. Each option serves specific project needs: elevation data for accurate terrain representation, flattened elevations for schematic drawings, or scaled exaggeration for subtle elevation differences that need emphasis.

For our spot elevation points, using actual point elevation data maintains survey accuracy and provides the most informative display. This becomes particularly valuable when generating profiles or cross-sections later in the design process.

The Display tab controls marker appearance across different view orientations—Plan, Model, Profile, and Section. This multi-view capability supports complex project workflows where the same data appears in various drawing types. Each view orientation offers specific display components: Plan and Model views provide both Marker and Label options, while Profile and Section views may show simplified representations.


Understanding these view-specific settings becomes crucial when working on infrastructure projects that require plan sheets, profile drawings, and cross-sections. The ability to customize appearance for each view type ensures optimal readability across all deliverables. For most applications, the default color and layer settings work well, but you can force specific layers or colors to meet project standards or client requirements.

The Summary tab provides a comprehensive overview of all your settings—think of it as a final quality control check before applying the style. This text-based summary displays every configuration choice across all tabs, allowing you to verify settings without clicking through each interface. The organized dropdown sections (Information, Marker, 3D Geometry, Display) make it easy to spot any configuration issues before finalizing your style.

With our style configured, click "Apply" followed by "OK" to save the new point marker style. Now we'll implement it in our project by accessing the Description Keysets. Navigate to Survey, right-click, and select "Edit Keys." Locate the "GS" (Ground Shot) entry, click the Style field, and replace "Standard" with our new "Spot" style. Confirm with "OK" and close the dialog with the checkmark.

Here's a critical step many users overlook: the style change won't automatically apply to existing points. You must select all relevant points, right-click, and choose "Apply Description Keysets" to implement the new styling. This manual application step provides control over when changes take effect, preventing unintended modifications to completed work.

The transformation is immediately visible—all Ground Shot points now display with our custom dot marker style, creating visual consistency and professional presentation. This systematic approach to point styling establishes the foundation for clear, readable drawings that meet professional standards.

Save your work to preserve these settings for future projects. In our next tutorial, we'll explore point label styles, where you'll learn to create informative text labels that complement these marker styles for complete point annotation systems.