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P&ID symbols explained

Reference guide · ISA-5.1 / ASME Y32.11 · ~11 min

A Piping & Instrumentation Diagram (P&ID) is the detailed engineering drawing of a process: every vessel, pump, valve, instrument, line and control loop, drawn with a shared set of symbols. This guide walks through the main symbol families — what they mean, the standards behind them, and how to download or build them as PNG/SVG for your HMI.

The standards behind P&ID symbols

There is no single universal standard — a P&ID combines several:

In practice every project publishes a legend sheet that fixes which variant of each symbol the drawings use. The symbols in the HMI Library catalog follow the ISA-101 calm palette and ISA-5.1 conventions so they read consistently on an operator screen.

Equipment symbols

The big process items. On a P&ID these are simplified outlines; on an HMI they become multi-state objects (running, stopped, fault…).

Pumps & fanscentrifugal, PD, vacuum… Motors3-ph, VFD, reversible… Tanks & vesselsatmospheric, pressure… Process equipmentHX, columns, cyclones…

Valve symbols

Valves are the most varied family on a P&ID. The body shows the valve type and the top shows the actuator:

For a deeper look — every body type, actuators, fail-safe positions and tags — see the dedicated P&ID valve symbols guide.

All valvesgate, globe, ball, check… Knife/slide gatesbulk-solids isolation Relief & safetyPSV, rupture disc…

Instrument symbols (ISA-5.1)

Instruments are drawn as a bubble (circle) carrying a tag. The bubble outline shows where the function lives:

BubbleMeaning
Plain circleField-mounted (local) instrument
Circle with a horizontal lineDCS / shared display, control room
Circle in a square (or diamond)PLC / programmable logic function
Circle with a double lineShared / auxiliary location

The tag inside follows the XX-NNN format — first letter = measured variable, following letters = function, NNN = loop number. For the full letter-code table see our ISA-5.1 instrumentation symbols reference.

Instrumentsfield, DCS, PLC bubbles ISA-5.1 referencetag letters & modifiers

Line & connection symbols

Lines tie everything together, and their style encodes what flows:

You can draw all of these — pipes, signal lines and flow arrows — directly in the Symbol Builder.

How to get P&ID symbols

Two practical options, both vendor-neutral (PNG + scalable SVG, ready for Weintek, WinCC, FactoryTalk, Ignition, Citect and AVEVA):

  1. Browse the catalog — 900+ ready-made ISA-compliant symbols. Filter by category, tweak the palette live, and export.
  2. Build your own — compose a symbol from shapes and catalog parts in the free online Symbol Builder.

Get P&ID symbols as PNG / SVG

Browse 900+ ISA-101 / ISA-5.1 symbols, or compose your own — free, no account.

Open the catalog → Open the builder →

Frequently asked questions

What standard defines P&ID symbols?

Instrument and function symbols come from ISA-5.1. Equipment and piping symbols draw on ASME Y32.11, ISO 10628 and ISO 14617. Most plants combine them into a project legend sheet.

What is the difference between a P&ID and a PFD?

A PFD shows major equipment and main streams. A P&ID adds every valve, instrument, line size, tag and control loop — the detailed drawing used for construction and operation.

Where can I download P&ID symbols?

Browse and download 900+ ISA-compliant symbols as PNG or SVG from the HMI Library catalog, or compose your own in the Symbol Builder.

How do you read an instrument tag?

An ISA-5.1 tag is XX-NNN: first letter = measured variable (F, T, P, L…), following letters = function (I, C, T…), NNN = loop number. FCV-104 is a flow control valve on loop 104.

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