In conditions of complex glacial topography, large-scale soil mapping (1:10 000) according to the World reference base for soil resources (WRB) 2022 classification faces significant challenges. High diversity of reference soil groups (RSG) and qualifiers can be found in a small area, and this diversity is not related to the influence of a single but rather to a set of soil-forming factors. As a part of the study, the classification of soils on postglacial landscape was conducted using the WRB 2022 classification system. The analysis was focused on examining relationships between RSG and qualifiers, and also with type of geological deposits, location on the terrain, human activities (drainage of agricultural land, soil tillage and erosion). Survey showed that, in a relatively small area, soil cover consisted of WRB RSG such as Luvisols, Retisols, Regosols, Stagnosols, Gleysols Phaeozems, Planosols, Podzols, Histosols and Anthrosols, with the respective sets of qualifiers. Soils corresponding to the Anthrosol RSG were formed during the construction of a drainage system by burying the former soil with deeper material and later by translocation of colluvium by soil erosion. In the complex glacial topography, the distribution of RSG and their qualifiers is specific, which poses a number of challenges for soil mapping. The study confirmed the possibility of WRB classification for large-scale mapping of agricultural soils on postglacial landscape at the RSG level. The use of qualifiers for definition of mapping units in similar conditions of complex terrain and geological deposits (when mapping on a scale of 1:10 000) is possible only by increasing sampling density.