Visitor Maps and Guides
The Ouachita National Forest provides a variety of map products to help you plan your next adventure or enjoy your next visit. Forest maps are available online for free download or purchase at the Forest Service Map page, the US Geological Survey (USGS) Store or at most Forest offices and visitor centers. Many Forest maps are also available for free download or purchase through the Avenza PDF Maps Store.
Printed maps for the Ouachita National Forest are available for purchase from your local district office. Maps are $14 each. Please call first for availability.
Maps can also be purchased online at the USGS store.
MVUMs are available through Avenza, or available to download in PDF form below. These are the most up-to-date resource to use for OHV riding. See list below for district maps:
- Caddo Womble MVUM
- Jessieville Winona Fourche MVUM
- Mena Oden MVUM
- Oklahoma MVUM
- Poteau Cold Springs MVUM
Use the Interactive Forest Visitor Map to locate roads, campgrounds, trails and other recreation sites on national forests. You can zoom in for high resolution detail and change the background map to suit your needs. Using the Tools icon, you can print your map or save it as a Geo PDF map. You can then import your Geo PDF to your phone or tablet using a program like Avenza to show your live location on the map - even without a cell signal.
FSTopo map products overlay U.S. Forest Service roads, trails and campgrounds on U.S. Geological Survey topographic maps. They are available for download by quadrangle as geo-referenced PDFs. This means they can be printed or used with an app like Avenza to show your live location on the map using your mobile device's built-in GPS.
Forest Visitor Maps are available through the GAIA GPS app. The annual subscription to GAIA GPS includes free access to visitor maps nationwide.
The National Forest System Land Ownership & Boundary Information is an online map product shows Forest Service Land Status Record System (LSRS) data. The LSRS data published via this map product is considered to be the authoritative source for Forest Service ownership. The data is designed to provide land status information necessary to manage National Forest System lands and national resources.