Soils may constitute evidence that connects a person or object to a particular location. The value of soil stems from its ubiquity and transferability to objects or persons. Due to the complexity of soil, the analysis of its inorganic and organic components can provide complementary and independent types of information about its geological origin, dominant vegetation, management and environment. We present an overview of a range of soil characterisation methods including chemical analysis, mineralogy and palynology, along with new approaches such as DNA profiling and profiling of other digital data such as that obtained from X-ray powder diffraction, infrared spectroscopy and organic marker analysis.Individual analytical techniques have different scales of resolution and relevance depending on the nature of the criminal case and context. Each method has its strengths and weaknesses. As more methods have become digital and quantitative, their use in combination as digital profiles will help to characterise soils more accurately and at different scales. These new approaches can be tested using existing soil databases, and database development and use will help to refine and narrow probable origin of a questioned sample in police intelligence, as well as giving increasingly robust sample comparisons for evidence.