The Frozen North of Westeros
Beyond the Wall Map
The complete map guide to the frozen wilderness north of Castle Black — haunted forests, wildling keeps, White Walker territory, and the Land of Always Winter
Beyond the Wall is the vast, ungoverned frozen wilderness north of The Wall in Game of Thrones. It spans the Haunted Forest, the Frostfang Mountains, the coast of Hardhome, the Fist of the First Men, and ends at the Land of Always Winter — the origin point of the White Walkers. It is home to the Free Folk (Wildlings), giants, and the dead.
What Is Beyond the Wall?
Beyond the Wall is the broad name for all lands north of The Wall on the continent of Westeros in Game of Thrones and George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. It is not a kingdom, not a governed territory, and not claimed by any of the Seven Kingdoms. It is simply the wild — hundreds of miles of frozen forests, wind-scoured plains, jagged mountain ranges, ice-locked coastlines, and, at its northernmost extreme, a region of permanent winter that never breaks.
The Wall — a massive barrier of ice and ancient magic stretching 300 miles across the northern neck of Westeros and standing 700 feet tall — separates this wilderness from the realm. The Night’s Watch mans The Wall from Castle Black and a series of lesser castles to keep whatever lurks in the north from crossing south.
The Geography of Beyond the Wall
The lands Beyond the Wall are not uniform. They are divided by geography, climate, and the kind of life they support — from dense managed forest just north of Castle Black to the absolute frozen silence of the far north. Understanding this geography is key to reading the Beyond the Wall map correctly.
The Haunted Forest
Directly north of The Wall and Castle Black lies the Haunted Forest — a vast, ancient, dark woodland that stretches hundreds of miles north and east. It earned its name because rangers and wildlings who venture too deep rarely return. The trees are enormous, the shadows permanent, and the forest itself feels alive with threat. Most of the early Night’s Watch ranging missions take place in and around the Haunted Forest.
Frostfang Mountains & Skirling Pass
To the northwest, the Frostfang Mountains form a jagged, glacier-covered range that runs deep into the beyond. The Skirling Pass is a high mountain corridor through the Frostfangs, notable as the location where Qhorin Halfhand’s Night’s Watch ranging party meets the wildling force led by Ygritte — the point where Jon Snow is captured and begins his time living among the Free Folk.
Fist of the First Men
The Fist of the First Men is a circular hill of exposed rock shaped like a clenched fist, several days’ march north of The Wall. The Night’s Watch establishes a defensive camp here during the Great Ranging. It is the location of the devastating White Walker ambush in Season 2 — the first major confrontation between the living army of the Night’s Watch and the army of the dead.
Craster’s Keep
Craster’s Keep is a fortified homestead deep in the Haunted Forest, serving as a waystation for Night’s Watch rangers traveling north. Craster himself is a wildling who maintains an uneasy truce with the Night’s Watch — but he sacrifices his male-born sons to the White Walkers. It becomes a flashpoint of conflict in Season 4.
Hardhome
Hardhome sits on the eastern coast Beyond the Wall, a rough coastal outpost. The Hardhome massacre in Season 5 — in which the Night King and his wight army overwhelm thousands of Free Folk — is the single most important military event on the Beyond the Wall map.
Cave of the Three-Eyed Raven
Hidden somewhere in the deep beyond, beneath a massive weirwood tree surrounded by the roots of the Children of the Forest, is the cave of the Three-Eyed Raven. Bran Stark’s entire northern journey is a quest to reach this location — the site of Bran’s training and the place where the Night King’s mark leads to a catastrophic attack.
The Land of Always Winter
At the northern extreme of the map lies the Land of Always Winter — a region where seasons do not turn, eternal night and ice. The White Walkers emerge from this region, and it is the point of origin for the Long Night and the Night King’s army. It represents the edge of the map.
Key Story Chapters Set Beyond the Wall
Beyond the Wall Locations — Browse by Zone
🌲 Forest Zone — Just North of The Wall
🏔️ Mountain Zone — Frostfangs & High Passes
🗿 Central Beyond — Ranging & Battle Sites
🌊 Eastern Coast — Hardhome & the Sea
🧊 Far North — Land of Always Winter
Beyond the Wall — Location Reference Table
| Location | Type | Zone | Best Known For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Haunted Forest | Ancient woodland | South beyond | Rangers and wildlings vanishing |
| Frostfang Mountains | Mountain range | Northwest beyond | Wildling migration, Jon capture arc |
| Fist of the First Men | Rocky hilltop | Central beyond | Night’s Watch massacre by wights |
| Craster’s Keep | Wildling keep | Forest zone | Son sacrifices to White Walkers |
| Hardhome | Coastal settlement | Eastern coast | Night King massacre (S5) |
| Three-Eyed Raven Cave | Weirwood cave | Deep central | Bran’s greensight training |
| Land of Always Winter | Extreme north | Far north | White Walker origin, eternal cold |
The Wall — Gateway Between Two Worlds
No page on Beyond the Wall is complete without understanding The Wall itself. The Wall is the 300-mile, 700-foot ice barrier that divides the known world from the wilderness to the north. It was built after the Long Night, during the Age of Heroes. Brandon the Builder is credited with its construction, aided by giants and the magic of the Children of the Forest.
The Wall is more than physical ice. It is laced with ancient spells and wards — spells that prevent White Walkers from crossing (explaining why the Night King needed a dead dragon to bring it down). Nineteen castles were originally built along its length; by the time of Game of Thrones, only three remain garrisoned: Castle Black, Eastwatch-by-the-Sea, and Shadow Tower. For the full Wall guide, see the Wall map page.
Beyond the Wall — Frequently Asked Questions
What is Beyond the Wall in Game of Thrones?
Beyond the Wall is the vast frozen wilderness north of The Wall on the continent of Westeros, home to the Free Folk, White Walkers, giants, and the Children of the Forest.
Where is Beyond the Wall on the map?
In the far north of Westeros, north of The Wall. Everything from the Haunted Forest to the Land of Always Winter is Beyond the Wall.
What are the key locations Beyond the Wall?
Haunted Forest, Craster’s Keep, Frostfang Mountains, Skirling Pass, Fist of the First Men, Hardhome, Cave of the Three-Eyed Raven, and the Land of Always Winter.
Who are the Wildlings?
The Free Folk — human inhabitants who reject the laws of the Seven Kingdoms, living in clans across the beyond.
What is the Land of Always Winter?
The extreme northern region of eternal winter, origin point of the White Walkers, shown as an endless frozen wasteland.
Why does Jon Snow go back Beyond the Wall at the end?
After killing Daenerys, he is exiled to the Night’s Watch but chooses to walk north with Tormund and Ghost, living free among the Free Folk.
