This paper provides a comprehensive description of all major plutonic rock units in Fiordland between Lakes Poteriteri and Te Anau, and the heads of Doubtful and George Sounds. Plutonic rocks comprise c. 80% of the basement in the area described, the remainder being metase dim entary and metavolcaniclastic rocks. The plutonic rocks, of which c. 50% are granitoids, were emplaced in three phases—at c. 492 Ma, between c. 365 and 318 Ma, and between 168 and 116 Ma. Correlatives of the Devonian Karamea Suite emplaced between c. 375 and 367 Ma, and the Triassic to Early Jurassic part of the Darran Suite emplaced between c. 230 and 168 Ma, are not present in the area described here. The strongly deformed Late Cambrian to Early Ordovician Jaquiery Granitoid Gneiss is one of the oldest plutonic rocks yet discovered in New Zealand and is of similar age to plutonic rocks within the Ross and Delamerian Orogens of Victoria Land and South Australia. Rocks emplaced between c. 365 and 318 Ma include Ridge Suite S‐type granitoids and closely related S/A‐type plutons, Foulwind Suite A‐type mafic and granitoid plutons, Tobin Suite I‐type granitoids, and several unassigned mafic plutons. Rocks emplaced between 168 and 116 Ma include extensive c. 168–128 Ma old calc‐alkaline LoSY gabbros, diorites, and granitoids of the Darran Suite, c. 165–135 Ma old hypersolvus perthitic syenogranites and peralkaline granitoids, c. 125 Ma gneissic diorite similar to the Western Fiordland Orthogneiss, and c. 123–116 Ma old quartz diorites and granitoids of the HiSY Separation Point Suite. Plutons from each suite tend to be concentrated in distinct NNE‐striking parallel belts up to 20 km wide and 110+ km long. These belts are one of the key features which define the regional structural grain of Fiordland basement geology. Their strike remains constant from the Carboniferous through to the Cretaceous. S, S/A, and A‐type plutons of the Carboniferous Ridge and Foulwind Suites are confined to a 125 km long but discontinuous belt in southern and central Fiordland, wholly within the areal extent of early Paleozoic metase dim entary basement. Volumetrically minor Carboniferous Tobin Suite I‐type granitoids are confined to the area east of exposed early Paleozoic metasedimentary basement. Much of eastern Fiordland is underlain by an extensive belt of heterogeneous Darran Suite rocks. Darran Suite rocks extend from Stewart Island to the Darran Mountains of northern Fiordland, forming a belt c. 15 km wide and 300 km long. Correlative Darran Suite rocks also occur further west where they intrude early Paleozoic metasediments, indicating that Jurassic to Early Cretaceous arc‐related plutonism and volcanism occurred inboard of the edge of early Paleozoic basement in some parts of the Median Batholith. Distinctive Jurassic, pink, hypersolvus syenogranite and alkalic granitoids form a narrow discontinuous belt within the wider calcalkaline Darran Suite. Cretaceous Separation Point Suite plutons form two major belts, one in easternmost Fiordland partially covered by Cenozoic sedimentary rocks, and the other stitching inboard and outboard parts of the Median Batholith in central Fiordland.