The cross slab is housed in a purpose-built shelter with see-through walls within the roofless shell of the old Eassie parish church, grid reference NO35264745 on the north side A94 road some 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) west of Glamis and 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) east of Meigle.
[2] The slab is carved on both faces in relief and, as it bears Pictish symbols, it falls into John Romilly Allen and Joseph Anderson's classification system as a Class II stone.
The upper quadrants held a pair of angels, but have suffered some damage, the right-hand figure being almost completely lost.
[7] From there it was moved to the churchyard,[10] where it stood for over a century, until the 1960s when a purpose-built building with viewing windows was built for it within the structure of the ruined church.
[11][12] The Eassie stone belongs to the Aberlemno School of Pictish sculpture as extended by Lloyd Laing from Ross Trench Jellicoe's original proposed list.