Relevant Course with discount code link: The Complete Guide to Chess Notation and Analysis
It’s the standard way to write chess moves using letters and numbers. Each square is identified by a unique coordinate (e.g., e4, d5).
The board is labeled a–h horizontally (files) and 1–8 vertically (ranks). The bottom-right square is always h1 (light).
K = King, Q = Queen, R = Rook, B = Bishop, N = Knight. Pawns are not given a letter.
Example: Nf3 means Knight to f3. e4 means Pawn to e4. Qxd5 means Queen captures on d5.
O-O = Kingside Castling
O-O-O = Queenside Castling
+ = Check
# = Checkmate
=Q = Promotion to Queen
Use "x" to indicate a capture. For example, Bxe6 means Bishop captures on e6. For pawns: exd5 means pawn from e-file captures on d5.
If two pieces of the same type can move to the same square, use the file or rank to clarify: Nbd2 (knight from b-file to d2), R1e2 (rook on rank 1 to e2).
If a pawn reaches the 8th rank, it must promote. e8=Q means a pawn on the e-file reaches the back rank and becomes a queen.
1–0 = White wins
0–1 = Black wins
½–½ = Draw
It helps track and study your games, follow master games, and communicate chess ideas universally across languages and platforms.
Practice by writing down your games or replaying classic ones using notation. It’s a vital skill for improvement and lifelong chess enjoyment.