The Ordnance Survey (OS), has re-measured the Scottish peak and its official height is now put at 1,345m - a metre taller than before.
The actual difference from the last official measurement in 1949 is much less - but enough for the height to be rounded up rather than down.
The change comes from the precision that can now be achieved with modern technologies such as GPS.
OS, Britain's official mapping agency, has already begun issuing maps with the new height.
The significance of the amendment has not been lost on the agency's geodetic consultant, Mark Greaves, who had first sight of the new assessment.
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"And then of course your next reaction is to check and double-check. I had to make sure we'd got it absolutely right," he told BBC News.
The official measuring point atop Ben Nevis is one of those squat concrete pillars familiar to hill-walkers all over the country.
It sits on a cairn, and it was when this pile of stones was restored recently that OS experts took the opportunity to check the mountain's exact height.
In those days, theodolites positioned on the "trig pillars" could be used to work out elevations by deriving angles from a system of national benchmarks.
Today, however, scientists have access to the Global Positioning System, which uses as its reference the atomic clocks flown aboard a constellation of satellites.
When the OS team deployed its GPS equipment on Ben Nevis, the height came out at 1,344.527m (4,411ft 2in).
It is true that Scotland and indeed northern England are lifting up over time.
This is a consequence of the Earth's crust rebounding after the loss of the massive ice sheet that used to sit on top of the region thousands of years ago.
It is, though, a very slow process, on the order of a millimetre per year, and not something the OS has to worry too much about, the report said.