Millimeters to Centimeters Converter
Instantly convert millimeters to centimeters, meters, inches, micrometers, and more — with live precision control, quick presets including real-world references, composite cm & mm display, and a downloadable PDF report.
Uses the exact factors 10 mm = 1 cm, 1000 mm = 1 m, and 1 in = 25.4 mm (international defined constants) — for reference only.
| Millimeters | Centimeters | Meters | cm & mm |
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Millimeters to Centimeters Conversion — Complete Guide for 2026
Converting millimeters to centimeters is the most fundamental metric length conversion — needed by engineers specifying component tolerances, medical professionals recording anatomical measurements, architects detailing construction drawings, fabric buyers converting bolt specifications, and anyone working within or crossing between SI metric sub-units. The conversion rests on a single exact, unambiguous relationship: 1 cm = 10 mm exactly — a defined integer ratio with no approximation, no historical negotiation, and no regional variation.
Our free Millimeters to Centimeters Converter performs this calculation with up to 8 decimal places and automatically outputs results across the full metric and imperial unit ladder — centimeters, meters, kilometers, micrometers, inches, feet, and yards — alongside a composite cm & mm display, a live log-scale bar chart, and a downloadable 2-page PDF report. Because 10 mm = 1 cm is an exact integer ratio, every millimeters-to-centimeters result is mathematically exact — the conversion is simply a decimal point shift, requiring no rounding whatsoever.
How to Use the Millimeters to Centimeters Converter in 4 Steps
A complete conversion takes under five seconds. Enter your millimeter value, set your precision, review every unit output simultaneously including the composite cm & mm breakdown, and download a PDF report for engineering files, medical records, specification archives, or product documentation.
Enter Your Millimeter Value
Type any length in millimeters — whole numbers or decimals both work. Use the Quick Preset chips for the most common reference values: 1 mm, 10 mm (1 cm), 25.4 mm (1 inch), 100 mm (10 cm), 304.8 mm (1 foot), or 1000 mm (1 meter). Results update live on every keystroke — no Convert button click required. Values like 914.4 mm (1 yard) or 22 mm (a common bolt diameter) are fully supported.
Set Decimal Precision
Choose between 0 and 8 decimal places using the input field or the precision slider. Use 0–2 for everyday estimates and product labels; 3–4 for medical measurements, architectural specs, and manufacturing drawings; and 6–8 for metrology, optical tolerances, scientific instrumentation, and CNC machining. Because mm-to-cm is a division by 10, the precision slider controls only display rounding — never formula accuracy.
Review the Full Breakdown
The hero result displays centimeters. The summary cards add meters and the composite cm & mm format — which for a whole-centimeter input like 100 mm simply shows “10 cm 0.0 mm”, and for a fractional value like 154 mm shows “15 cm 4.0 mm”. The full conversion grid adds inches, feet, yards, kilometers, and micrometers. The log-scale bar chart makes the vast range from micrometers to kilometers readable on one axis.
Download Your PDF Report
Click Download PDF for a professionally formatted 2-page report. Page 1 includes the branded header, hero centimeters result, metric/imperial side-by-side breakdown table, six labeled summary cards, and chart snapshot. Page 2 adds a 15-row reference table from 1 mm to 1609.3 mm, with real-world landmarks labeled and your input highlighted in blue — formatted for engineering project files, medical records, product specification sheets, and measurement archives.
The Millimeter, the Centimeter, and Why This Conversion Is Always Exact
The millimeter and centimeter are both SI metric units — subdivisions of the meter, the SI base unit of length defined since 1983 as the distance light travels in a vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second. A millimeter is exactly one-thousandth (1/1000) of a meter; a centimeter is exactly one-hundredth (1/100) of a meter. Their ratio follows directly: 1 cm = 10 mm exactly, with no measurement, approximation, or historical compromise required.
This is fundamentally different from conversions crossing the metric–imperial boundary (such as millimeters to inches, which depend on the defined constant 1 in = 25.4 mm). Within the SI system, all unit conversions are exact powers of 10, which is precisely what makes the metric system so valuable for scientific and engineering work.
Why mm-to-cm always produces a perfectly exact result
A decimal number is a terminating decimal if and only if its denominator (in lowest terms) has no prime factors other than 2 and 5. The conversion factor is 0.1 = 1/10. The denominator 10 = 2 × 5 — only the prime factors 2 and 5. Therefore, 0.1 is a terminating decimal (in fact the shortest possible one), and multiplying any finite mm value by 0.1 always produces a terminating decimal result. 154 mm × 0.1 = 15.4 cm exactly — not approximately, exactly. This is simply a shift of the decimal point by one place. No other common unit conversion is this clean — it is the defining advantage of working within a decimal-based measurement system.
What the Millimeters to Centimeters Converter Calculates
Every output is derived from the same exact base constant — 1 cm = 10 mm — with no intermediate rounding between units, giving you a complete metric and imperial breakdown plus the composite cm & mm display from one instant, exact calculation.
Centimeters (Hero Result)
The primary conversion divides your millimeter value by the exact constant 10 to produce centimeters. Because 10 is an exact integer, the centimeter result is always mathematically exact for any finite mm input — 100 mm = 10 cm exactly, 25.4 mm = 2.54 cm exactly, 304.8 mm = 30.48 cm exactly. Centimeters are the preferred unit for body measurements, garment sizing, furniture dimensions, and everyday product specifications in metric countries.
Composite cm & mm Display
The composite display breaks the millimeter input into whole centimeters and remaining millimeters (0–9.9). For whole-centimeter inputs, remaining mm is zero: 100 mm = “10 cm 0.0 mm”. For fractional inputs like 154 mm, the composite shows “15 cm 4.0 mm” — derived from: 154 ÷ 10 = 15 whole cm, remainder 4.0 mm. This two-level format is standard in medical imaging, precision manufacturing documentation, and architectural detailing.
Meters & Kilometers
Meters (mm ÷ 1000, exact) are used for room dimensions, athletic distances, construction plans, and property surveys. Because 1000 is an exact integer, every mm value produces an exact meter result — 1000 mm = 1 m exactly, 304.8 mm = 0.3048 m exactly. Kilometers (mm ÷ 1,000,000, exact) convert very large millimeter values into road and geographic distances — both conversions are exact powers of 10, giving terminating decimal results for all inputs.
Inches, Feet & Yards
Inches (mm ÷ 25.4, exact constant: 1 in = 25.4 mm defined) bridge the metric and imperial systems. 25.4 mm = 1 in exactly; 254 mm = 10 in exactly. Feet (mm ÷ 304.8, exact: 1 ft = 304.8 mm) and yards (mm ÷ 914.4, exact: 1 yd = 914.4 mm) are shown in the full results grid. These are essential when working with U.S. or UK specifications alongside metric drawings: 1000 mm = 39.370 in = 3.281 ft = 1.094 yd, all exact to the formula level.
Micrometers (µm)
Micrometers (mm × 1000, exact: 1 mm = 1000 µm) are used in precision engineering, semiconductor manufacturing, optical tolerances, and material science — any application where sub-millimeter precision is critical. 1 mm = 1000 µm exactly; 25.4 mm = 25,400 µm exactly. The log-scale bar chart makes the enormous numeric difference between micrometers and meters visually legible on a single axis — 1000 mm spans from 1,000,000 µm to 0.001 km.
2-Page PDF Report
Page 1 contains the branded header, hero centimeters result, metric/imperial side-by-side breakdown table, six summary cards (input mm, centimeters, meters, inches, micrometers, composite cm & mm), and chart snapshot. Page 2 contains a 15-row reference table from 1 mm to 1609.3 mm, with real-world landmarks labeled (1 cm, 1 inch, 1 foot, 1 yard, 1 meter), and your input highlighted in blue.
Millimeters to Centimeters Conversion Chart — Common Values
Every value uses the exact constant 10 mm = 1 cm. All centimeter results are mathematically exact — the conversion is a simple division by 10. Highlighted rows mark key real-world landmarks and imperial unit anchors.
| Millimeters | Centimeters | Meters | Inches | Common Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 mm | 0.1 cm | 0.001 m | 0.0394 in | 1 mm — credit card thickness (0.76 mm), paper clip wire (0.9 mm) |
| 5 mm | 0.5 cm | 0.005 m | 0.1969 in | 5 mm — pencil diameter, large staple width |
| 10 mm | 1.0 cm | 0.010 m | 0.3937 in | 10 mm — exactly 1 centimeter |
| 20 mm | 2.0 cm | 0.020 m | 0.7874 in | 20 mm — standard AA battery diameter |
| 25.4 mm | 2.54 cm | 0.0254 m | 1.0000 in | 25.4 mm — exactly 1 inch (defined constant) |
| 50 mm | 5.0 cm | 0.050 m | 1.9685 in | 50 mm — standard film roll width, golf tee height |
| 100 mm | 10.0 cm | 0.100 m | 3.9370 in | 100 mm — a standard 10 cm ruler segment |
| 150 mm | 15.0 cm | 0.150 m | 5.9055 in | 150 mm — standard 6-inch scale ruler length |
| 200 mm | 20.0 cm | 0.200 m | 7.8740 in | 200 mm — common notebook page height (A5) |
| 254 mm | 25.4 cm | 0.254 m | 10.0000 in | 254 mm — exactly 10 inches |
| 300 mm | 30.0 cm | 0.300 m | 11.8110 in | 300 mm — standard 30 cm school ruler |
| 304.8 mm | 30.48 cm | 0.3048 m | 12.0000 in | 304.8 mm — exactly 1 foot (12 inches) |
| 500 mm | 50.0 cm | 0.500 m | 19.6850 in | 500 mm — half a meter, typical desk depth |
| 914.4 mm | 91.44 cm | 0.9144 m | 36.0000 in | 914.4 mm — exactly 1 yard (36 inches) |
| 1000 mm | 100.0 cm | 1.0000 m | 39.3701 in | 1000 mm — exactly 1 meter |
All centimeter results are mathematically exact — division by 10 is a decimal point shift with no rounding. Highlighted rows mark key imperial unit anchors and common metric landmarks.
Millimeters to Centimeters — Reference by Context
Millimeter measurements appear across an exceptionally wide range of professional contexts — from engineering tolerances and hardware specifications to medical imaging dimensions and fabric seam allowances. The tables below organize the most common millimeter values by context, showing both the exact centimeter result and the composite cm & mm display.
| Millimeters | Centimeters | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5 mm | 0.05 cm | Laser kerf width |
| 1.0 mm | 0.10 cm | Credit card thickness |
| 1.5 mm | 0.15 cm | Corrugated cardboard wall |
| 3.0 mm | 0.30 cm | Standard plywood veneer |
| 6.0 mm | 0.60 cm | Quarter-inch plywood (nom.) |
| 12.5 mm | 1.25 cm | Standard drywall thickness |
| 19 mm | 1.90 cm | 3/4-inch timber (nom.) |
| 38 mm | 3.80 cm | 2×4 lumber width (actual) |
| 89 mm | 8.90 cm | 2×4 lumber depth (actual) |
| 100 mm | 10.00 cm | 4-inch concrete block width |
| 200 mm | 20.00 cm | 8-inch CMU block width |
| 300 mm | 30.00 cm | Standard floor tile (30×30) |
| 600 mm | 60.00 cm | Standard cabinet width |
| 1200 mm | 120.00 cm | Standard plywood sheet width |
| 2440 mm | 244.00 cm | Standard plywood sheet length |
| Dimension | Millimeters | Centimeters |
|---|---|---|
| Sewing seam allowance | 6–15 mm | 0.6–1.5 cm |
| Standard syringe needle (large) | 38 mm | 3.80 cm |
| Smartphone thickness (avg) | 7–9 mm | 0.7–0.9 cm |
| Credit card width | 85.6 mm | 8.56 cm |
| A4 paper width | 210 mm | 21.00 cm |
| A4 paper height | 297 mm | 29.70 cm |
| Letter paper width | 215.9 mm | 21.59 cm |
| Tennis ball diameter | 67 mm | 6.70 cm |
| Golf ball diameter | 42.67 mm | 4.27 cm |
| Soccer ball circumference | 680–700 mm | 68–70 cm |
| Standard door width | 813 mm | 81.30 cm |
| Standard door height | 2032 mm | 203.20 cm |
| Hip-width (avg adult) | 350–430 mm | 35–43 cm |
| Laptop screen (14-inch) | 356 mm diag. | 35.60 cm |
| Bed (UK King width) | 1500 mm | 150.00 cm |
Millimeters to Centimeters — Key Conversion Numbers
The Millimeters to Centimeters Converter Is Built For You If…
Whether you’re an engineer converting a component dimension from a metric technical drawing into centimeters for a product datasheet, a nurse converting a wound measurement from millimeters to centimeters for a clinical note, or a fabric cutter converting a seam allowance specification for a metric pattern — this converter delivers an exact, documented result in seconds.
Engineers, Designers & Manufacturers
CAD drawings, tolerances, hardware & product specsTechnical drawings and CAD files use millimeters as the base unit; product datasheets, packaging specs, and customer-facing documentation often require centimeters. A mechanical engineer specifying a 38 mm shaft diameter needs 3.80 cm for the product datasheet. A furniture designer with a 1200 mm panel width needs 120 cm for the catalogue listing. A packaging engineer checking that a 254 mm insert fits a 25.4 cm cavity needs the conversion confirmed exactly. All these are exact, requiring no estimation or approximation — and a traceable record in the PDF keeps audit trails clean.
- Use 3–4 decimal places for centimeter outputs in technical documentation and drawing title blocks
- Use the µm output for surface roughness and optical tolerance specifications
- Note the imperial anchor: 25.4 mm = 2.54 cm = 1 in (defined); 304.8 mm = 1 ft (defined)
- Export PDF to attach to ECOs (engineering change orders), BOM revisions, and supplier RFQs
Medical & Healthcare Professionals
Wound measurement, imaging, clinical notes & pathologyClinical measurement commonly mixes millimeters (imaging, wound depth, lesion size, surgical margins) and centimeters (body circumference, limb length, organ size). A radiologist reporting a 12 mm lymph node needs to note 1.2 cm for the referral letter. A wound care nurse measuring a 37 mm ulcer needs 3.7 cm for the nursing note. A pathologist recording a 22 mm tumor margin needs 2.2 cm for the histology report. Every conversion is exact — no rounding errors to introduce discrepancies between imaging reports, nursing notes, and oncology staging records.
- Use 1 decimal place for clinical notes (e.g. 3.7 cm); use 2+ decimal places for pathology and research
- The composite cm & mm display matches how clinical measurements are often verbally reported (“2 cm 5 mm”)
- Key anchor: 10 mm = 1 cm exactly; 1000 mm = 100 cm = 1 m exactly
- Export PDF for attachment to patient records, research data appendices, and clinical audit files
Sewists, Tailors & Textile Professionals
Seam allowances, pattern dimensions & fabric specificationsSewing patterns from different countries and publishing eras use a mixture of millimeter and centimeter measurements. A tailor following a Japanese pattern with a 15 mm seam allowance needs to know that is 1.5 cm for their metric ruler. A dressmaker ordering interfacing specified in millimeters from a German supplier needs the centimeter equivalent for their fabric bill. A pattern grader converting between European size standards specified in mm and the cm-based grading tables needs exact conversions at every step. No estimation or rounding-up required — the formula is exact.
- Use 1 decimal place on cm outputs to match standard European sewing pattern precision
- Common seam allowances: 6 mm = 0.6 cm · 10 mm = 1.0 cm · 15 mm = 1.5 cm · 20 mm = 2.0 cm
- The composite cm & mm display maps directly to how dressmakers read combination metric tape measures
- Export PDF for pattern instruction sheets, workshop handouts, and supplier purchase orders
7 Tips for Accurate Millimeters to Centimeters Conversions
Dividing by 10 is exact and simple, but a few habits prevent the errors that arise when millimeter-based technical drawings, medical records, and product specs meet centimeter-based documentation, international standards, and imperial cross-references.
Division by 10 Is a Decimal Point Shift — No Rounding Needed
Converting mm to cm is exactly and always a division by 10 — which means moving the decimal point one place to the left. 152 mm → 15.2 cm. 7.5 mm → 0.75 cm. 914.4 mm → 91.44 cm. There is no rounding, no approximation, and no intermediate step where precision can be lost. This is the unique advantage of working within a decimal metric system — and it means any result produced by this calculator is exact to the formula level, with the precision slider controlling only how many decimal places are shown.
Distinguish mm vs cm Before Copying Values Into Documents
One of the most common specification errors is transcribing a millimeter value into a field expecting centimeters, or vice versa — producing a 10× error. A 150 mm shelf depth entered as 150 cm creates a 1.5-meter deep shelf. Always verify the unit label on both the source drawing and the destination field. The composite cm & mm display in this calculator makes the unit identity visually unambiguous: 150 mm shows as “15 cm 0.0 mm” — clearly not 150 cm.
Memorize the Six Key mm-to-cm Anchors
For everyday use: 10 mm = 1 cm · 25.4 mm = 2.54 cm (1 in) · 100 mm = 10 cm · 304.8 mm = 30.48 cm (1 ft) · 914.4 mm = 91.44 cm (1 yd) · 1000 mm = 100 cm (1 m). All exact. With these six anchors, you can bracket and cross-check any conversion mentally: 500 mm = half of 1000 mm = 50 cm; 200 mm = 2 × 100 mm = 20 cm.
Use mm for Technical Precision, cm for Human-Scale Communication
Millimeters are the preferred unit for engineering drawings, hardware specifications, manufacturing tolerances, and medical measurements precisely because they avoid sub-unit decimals at the precision levels needed: 12.5 mm (drywall thickness) is cleaner than 1.25 cm. Centimeters are preferred for body measurements, furniture dimensions, and product specifications communicated to end consumers. Choosing the right unit for the context reduces errors in both reading and recording measurements. This converter lets you see both simultaneously.
For Inch-to-mm-to-cm Chains, Convert in One Step
When starting from an inch value and needing centimeters, the most accurate approach is a direct conversion: cm = inches × 2.54. Avoid the two-step chain of inches → mm → cm, which introduces no additional error (both constants are exact) but adds unnecessary steps. Equivalently: cm = mm ÷ 10, and this calculator computes the inch output simultaneously, so you can read both in one view. For the record: 1 in = 25.4 mm = 2.54 cm exactly, all by the same international definition.
Use the µm Output for Sub-millimeter Precision Applications
For applications where sub-millimeter precision matters — CNC machining tolerances, optical component specifications, semiconductor feature sizes — the micrometer (µm) output avoids the awkwardness of many decimal places in millimeters. Instead of writing 0.025 mm, write 25 µm. Instead of 0.001 mm, write 1 µm. The calculator computes µm as mm × 1000 (exact), so 25.4 mm = 25,400 µm exactly. This is the unit used by ISO surface roughness standards (Ra, Rz) and by semiconductor process nodes.
Use the PDF as a Permanent Specification Record
For professional deliverables — engineering ECOs, clinical measurement records, architectural specification packages, or textile purchase orders — download the PDF and attach it to the project file. It captures the exact mm input, all converted outputs at your chosen precision, the conversion constant (10 mm = 1 cm, 1 in = 25.4 mm), the composite cm & mm breakdown, the reference table with real-world landmarks, and the generation date. This creates a complete, traceable conversion record for audits, regulatory submissions, and handover packages.
Millimeters to Centimeters Converter — Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about converting millimeters to centimeters, why this conversion is always exact, the exact values for common hardware dimensions and imperial anchors, and how to apply this calculator accurately across engineering, medical, and textile applications.
To convert millimeters to centimeters, divide the millimeter value by 10. The formula is: cm = mm ÷ 10. For example, 150 mm ÷ 10 = 15.0 cm exactly. Because dividing by 10 is equivalent to multiplying by 0.1 — a terminating decimal — every mm-to-cm result is a terminating decimal. The conversion is simply a shift of the decimal point one place to the left, with no rounding required at the formula level.
Both millimeters and centimeters are SI metric units defined as exact fractions of the meter: 1 mm = 1/1000 m and 1 cm = 1/100 m. Their ratio 10 mm = 1 cm follows directly from these definitions and is exact by construction, not a measured approximation.
100 mm equals exactly 10 cm (100 ÷ 10 = 10). This is a perfectly exact result, not a rounded approximation. In meters: 0.1 m exactly. In inches: 3.937 in (100 ÷ 25.4 = 3.9370… in, which is non-terminating — the only non-exact output in this direction).
100 mm / 10 cm is a common engineering benchmark dimension — it is the width of a standard 4-inch nominal pipe, the height of a standard brick course including mortar, and a widely used round number for product sizing. Use the 100 mm preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
1 mm equals exactly 0.1 cm. This is the exact defined ratio: 1 cm = 10 mm, so 1 mm = 0.1 cm. In meters: 0.001 m exactly. In micrometers: 1000 µm exactly. In inches: 0.03937 in (1 ÷ 25.4 = non-terminating decimal, shown to 5 d.p. here).
A millimeter is a very small length in everyday terms — roughly the thickness of a credit card (0.76 mm), the diameter of a pencil tip, or the width of the ink line left by a fine ballpoint pen. Use the 1 mm preset chip to see the full unit breakdown across all outputs.
25.4 mm equals exactly 2.54 cm (25.4 ÷ 10 = 2.54). This is the internationally defined length of one inch: 1 in = 25.4 mm = 2.54 cm, established by the International Yard and Pound Agreement signed on July 1, 1959. In meters: 0.0254 m exactly.
The 25.4 mm / 2.54 cm relationship is the single constant that bridges the entire metric and imperial length systems. Every inch-to-metric or metric-to-inch conversion ultimately derives from this one number. Use the 25.4 mm (1 in) preset chip to see the full unit breakdown.
304.8 mm equals exactly 30.48 cm (304.8 ÷ 10 = 30.48). This is the exact defined length of one foot: 1 ft = 12 in = 12 × 25.4 mm = 304.8 mm = 30.48 cm, all exact. In meters: 0.3048 m exactly. In yards: 1/3 yd exactly.
Knowing that 1 ft = 30.48 cm is essential for any work that crosses between imperial construction drawings and metric material specifications. A standard U.S. residential ceiling height of 8 ft = 2438.4 mm = 243.84 cm exactly. Use the 304.8 mm (1 ft) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
1000 mm equals exactly 100 cm, which equals exactly 1 meter. These are all defined SI relationships: 1 m = 100 cm = 1000 mm — exact by definition, with no approximation. In inches: 39.3701 in (non-terminating, shown to 4 d.p.). In feet: 3.28084 ft (non-terminating).
The 1 m = 100 cm = 1000 mm chain is the foundation of the metric length system. The metric system was specifically designed so that unit conversions within it are always exact powers of 10 — this is what distinguishes it from the imperial system and makes it universally preferred for scientific and engineering work. Use the 1000 mm (1 m) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
The conversion from millimeters to centimeters is exact because the relationship 10 mm = 1 cm is an exact integer definition. Dividing by 10 is equivalent to multiplying by 0.1 = 1/10. The denominator 10 = 2 × 5 has only the prime factors 2 and 5, so 1/10 = 0.1 is a terminating decimal (in fact the shortest possible). Multiplying any finite mm value by 0.1 always produces a terminating decimal result — in the simplest case, just moving the decimal point one place to the left.
This is the opposite of conversions involving inches, where the factor 25.4 produces results like 1 in = 0.03937… m (non-terminating) in the reverse direction. Within the SI metric system, all unit conversions are exact powers of 10, so every metric-to-metric conversion in this calculator is mathematically exact at the formula level. The precision slider controls only presentational rounding.
A centimeter is exactly 10 times larger than a millimeter: 1 cm = 10 mm. Both are subdivisions of the SI base unit of length, the meter. A millimeter is 1/1000 of a meter (the prefix “milli-” means one-thousandth); a centimeter is 1/100 of a meter (the prefix “centi-” means one-hundredth).
In everyday terms: a millimeter is approximately the thickness of a credit card or a pencil tip; a centimeter is roughly the width of a fingernail or a pencil eraser. Millimeters are preferred for engineering drawings, hardware specifications, medical imaging, and precision manufacturing — applications where sub-centimeter accuracy is needed without resorting to decimal fractions of centimeters. Centimeters are preferred for body measurements (clothing sizes, medical charting), furniture and room dimensions, and everyday consumer product specs in metric countries.
The calculator uses the exact constant 1 cm = 10 mm with double-precision floating-point arithmetic, accurate to approximately 15 significant digits. Because the conversion is a division by exactly 10 (multiplying by 0.1, a terminating decimal), every mm-to-cm calculation produces a mathematically exact result — no rounding occurs at the formula level. The display rounds only to your chosen precision (0–8 decimal places), which you control with the precision slider.
All metric outputs (meters, kilometers, micrometers) also involve only exact powers of 10, so every metric output is exact. Outputs involving inches, feet, and yards use the exact constant 1 in = 25.4 mm (a terminating decimal), so those outputs are also exact at the formula level — though non-terminating in the reverse direction. The downloadable PDF records all outputs and the base conversion constants with the generation date.
Accuracy note: The HomeExpertly Millimeters to Centimeters Converter uses the exact SI metric relationship 1 cm = 10 mm (a defined integer ratio) and the exact international constant 1 in = 25.4 mm (established by the International Yard and Pound Agreement, July 1, 1959, and recognized by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM)). All calculations are performed with double-precision floating-point arithmetic accurate to approximately 15 significant digits. Because the mm-to-cm conversion factor (0.1) is a terminating decimal, all displayed centimeter, meter, kilometer, and micrometer results are mathematically exact at the formula level; the display precision slider controls only presentational rounding. Inch, foot, and yard outputs use the exact constant 1 in = 25.4 mm and are likewise exact at the formula level. Results are for informational and reference purposes only. For applications where measurement accuracy is critical — including but not limited to civil engineering, precision manufacturing, clinical medicine, land surveying, pharmaceutical production, legal documentation, or building permits — always verify your conversions independently using calibrated measuring instruments or authoritative reference documents, and consult a licensed professional for measurement-critical applications. HomeExpertly is not responsible for any consequences arising from the use of these conversions.
