Quantification of residual stress gradients can provide great improvements in understanding the complex interactions between microstructure, mechanical state, mode(s) of failure and structural integrity. Highly focused local probe nondestructive techniques such as X-ray diffraction, electron diffraction or Raman spectroscopy have an established track record in determining spatial variations in the relative changes in residual stress with respect to a reference state for many structural materials. However, the interpretation of these measurements in terms of absolute stress values requires a strain-free sample often difficult to obtain due to the influence of chemistry, microstructure or processing route. With the increasing availability of focused ion beam instruments, a new approach has been developed which is known as the micro-scale ring-core focused ion beam-digital image correlation technique. This technique is becoming the principal tool for quantifying absolute in-plane residual stresses. It can be applied to a broad range of materials: crystalline and amorphous metallic alloys and ceramics, polymers, composites and biomaterials. The precise nano-scale positioning and welldefined gauge volume of this experimental technique make it eminently suitable for spatially resolved analysis, that is, residual stress profiling and mapping. Following a summary of micro-stress evaluation approaches, we focus our attention on focused ion beam-digital image correlation methods and assess the application of micro-scale ring-core methods for spatially resolved residual stress profiling. The sequential ring-core milling focused ion beam-digital image correlation method allows micro-to macro-scale mapping at the step of 10-1000 mm, while the parallel focused ion beam-digital image correlation approach exploits simultaneous milling operation to quantify stress profiles at the micron scale (1-10 mm). Cross-validation against X-ray diffraction results confirms that these approaches represent accurate, reliable and effective residual stress mapping methods.