All animals must move efficiently throughout their world. However, the mechanisms through which they accomplish this potentially vary among species. Previous work exploring the use of feature information and geometric information in movement through space has indicated that geometric information is commonly used and that some species sometimes also use feature information. Here, I investigated if a cold-blooded species, leopard geckos (Eublepharis macularius), would use geometric and/or feature information. In training, geckos learned to move to a correct corner within the box with a distinctive feature. In test when only geometric information was available, geckos chose either their assigned corner or its geometric opposite. In another test when feature information conflicted with geometric information, geckos did not use feature information and instead made choices consistent with using geometric information. This suggests geckos used geometric information preferentially to feature information in this experiment after both had been available throughout training when they were placed in conflict.