Millimeters to Feet Converter
Instantly convert millimeters to feet, inches, yards, meters, and more — with live precision control, quick presets for common imperial benchmarks, ft & in composite display, and a downloadable PDF report.
Uses the exact factors 1 ft = 304.8 mm, 1 in = 25.4 mm, and 1 yd = 914.4 mm (international defined constants) — for reference only.
| Millimeters | Feet | Inches | ft & in |
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Millimeters to Feet Conversion — Complete Guide for 2026
Converting millimeters to feet is one of the most common cross-system unit conversions in construction, engineering, woodworking, and manufacturing — where metric precision instruments, CAD drawings, and material specifications measured in millimeters must be communicated to tradespeople, clients, and suppliers in the foot-and-inch format used in the United States, United Kingdom, and many international construction and aviation contexts. A carpenter whose CNC machine outputs cuts in millimeters but whose plans are dimensioned in feet and inches, a structural engineer translating millimeter bolt-hole tolerances into the fractional-inch language of a U.S. fabrication shop, or a physician recording a patient’s height from a millimeter-scaled wall gauge into a U.S. medical record that uses feet and inches — all need the same exact relationship: 1 ft = 304.8 mm exactly.
Our free Millimeters to Feet Converter performs this calculation with up to 8 decimal places and automatically outputs results across the full imperial and metric unit ladder — feet, inches, yards, centimeters, meters, kilometers, and miles — alongside a composite ft & in display that matches the format used in everyday speech, construction drawings, and medical records, a live log-scale bar chart, and a downloadable 2-page PDF report.
How to Use the Millimeters to Feet 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 ft & in breakdown, and download a PDF report for construction documentation, medical records, manufacturing specs, or project archives.
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: 25.4 mm (1 in), 304.8 mm (1 ft), 914.4 mm (1 yd), 1,000 mm (1 m), 1,828.8 mm (6 ft), or 10,000 mm (10 m). Results update live on every keystroke. Common construction dimensions like 2,438 mm (standard 8 ft drywall sheet), 3,048 mm (10 ft ceiling), and 1,219 mm (4 ft panel width) are fully supported.
Set Decimal Precision
Choose between 0 and 8 decimal places using the input field or the precision slider. The default of 4 decimal places is ideal for most engineering and construction applications. Use 2–3 for architectural plans and everyday measurement estimates; 5–8 for precision manufacturing tolerances, toolmaking, metrology, and scientific measurement. Because most mm-to-ft results are non-terminating, the precision slider meaningfully controls the accuracy of the displayed result.
Review the Full Breakdown
The hero result displays feet. The summary cards add inches and the composite ft & in format — which for 1,000 mm shows “3 ft 3.37 in”, matching the format used on U.S. construction drawings and in everyday speech (“three feet three and a bit”). The full conversion grid adds yards, centimeters, meters, kilometers, and miles. The log-scale bar chart makes the magnitude spread between millimeters and feet readable on a single axis.
Download Your PDF Report
Click Download PDF for a professionally formatted 2-page report. Page 1 includes the branded header, hero feet result, imperial/metric side-by-side breakdown table, six labeled summary cards, and chart snapshot. Page 2 adds a 15-row reference table from 1 mm to 100,000 mm, with key imperial benchmarks labeled — 1 in, 1 ft, 1 yd, 5 ft, 6 ft — and metric anchors, with your input highlighted in blue.
Why 1 ft = 304.8 mm, and Why Results Are Often Non-Terminating
The exact value 1 ft = 304.8 mm is derived from two defined constants established by the International Yard and Pound Agreement of July 1, 1959, signed by the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, and recognized by NIST and BIPM. The first constant: 1 international inch = 25.4 mm exactly (a terminating decimal). The second: 1 foot = 12 inches exactly (an exact integer). Combining these: 1 ft = 12 × 25.4 mm = 304.8 mm exactly. No measurement or approximation is involved — it is a pure definition.
This is fundamentally different from the all-metric conversions on this site, where every factor is an exact power of 10. Here, the denominator 304.8 = 1524/5 in fraction form. Expressed as 1/304.8 = 5/1524, the denominator 1524 = 4 × 3 × 127. Because 127 is a prime factor that is neither 2 nor 5, the decimal expansion of 1/304.8 is non-terminating and repeating. Only mm values that are exact multiples of 304.8 produce terminating foot results — such as 304.8, 609.6, 914.4, 1219.2, 1524, 1828.8 mm. All others produce repeating decimals, displayed to your chosen precision.
The 25.4 mm inch anchor and the ft & in composite
The inch is the simpler building block: 1 in = 25.4 mm exactly. The denominator 25.4 = 127/5 in fraction form gives 1/25.4 = 5/127. Since 127 is prime and not 2 or 5, most mm-to-inch results are also non-terminating — except for exact multiples of 25.4 mm (every inch value). The composite ft & in display separates the whole-foot component and the remaining inches, giving a format that matches U.S. construction drawings, medical height records, aviation ceiling specifications, and everyday speech in imperial-system countries.
What the Millimeters to Feet Converter Calculates
Every output is derived from the same exact base constant — 1 ft = 304.8 mm — with no intermediate rounding between units, giving you a complete imperial and metric breakdown plus the composite ft & in display from one instant calculation.
Feet (Hero Result)
The primary conversion divides your millimeter value by the exact constant 304.8. 304.8 mm = 1.0000 ft exactly; 1,000 mm = 3.2808 ft; 1,828.8 mm = 6.0000 ft exactly. Feet are used in U.S. and UK construction plans, real estate floor areas, aviation altitude and runway lengths, ceiling height specifications, and all contexts where the imperial system is standard. The default 4-decimal precision gives results like 3.2808 ft, matching the precision needed for architectural documentation.
Composite ft & in Display
The composite display splits the foot result into whole feet and remaining inches (0–11.99). 1,000 mm = “3 ft 3.37 in”; 1,828.8 mm = “6 ft 0.00 in”; 304.8 mm = “1 ft 0.00 in”. This format matches U.S. and UK construction drawings (“6′ 0″”), medical height records (“5 ft 11 in”), real estate listings (“8-foot ceilings”), and everyday imperial speech. It is more immediately readable than a decimal foot value for most practical purposes.
Inches & Yards
Inches (mm ÷ 25.4, exact: 1 in = 25.4 mm) give the most granular imperial measurement: 1,000 mm = 39.3701 in. Only exact multiples of 25.4 mm produce whole-inch results (25.4, 50.8, 76.2, …). Yards (mm ÷ 914.4, exact: 1 yd = 914.4 mm = 3 ft) are shown in the full grid: 1,000 mm = 1.0936 yd. These outputs are essential for U.S. fabric measurement, sports field dimensions (American football, baseball), and garden/landscape planning.
Centimeters & Meters
Centimeters (mm ÷ 10, exact: 1 cm = 10 mm) and meters (mm ÷ 1,000, exact: 1 m = 1,000 mm) are both exact powers of 10 with no rounding loss. 1,000 mm = 100 cm exactly = 1.0000 m exactly. These metric outputs are essential when the same dimension must be documented in both systems — for example, a structural steel section of 457 mm = 45.7 cm = 0.457 m for a metric specification and 1.4993 ft for a U.S. shop drawing.
Kilometers, Miles & Visual Chart
Kilometers (mm ÷ 1,000,000, exact) and miles (mm ÷ 1,609,344, exact: 1 mi = 1,609,344 mm) contextualize very large millimeter values. The horizontal log-scale bar chart plots mm, ft, in, yd, and cm simultaneously — making the 25× difference between mm and ft numeric values readable on one axis. For 1,000 mm: mm (1000) vs ft (3.28) vs in (39.37) vs yd (1.09) — the log scale makes all bars visible.
2-Page PDF Report
Page 1 contains the branded header, hero feet result, imperial/metric side-by-side breakdown table (ft, in, yd on the left; cm, m, km, mi on the right), six summary cards (input mm, feet, inches, yards, ft & in composite, meters), and chart snapshot. Page 2 contains a 15-row reference table from 1 mm to 100,000 mm, with imperial benchmarks and metric anchors labeled, and your input highlighted in blue.
Millimeters to Feet Conversion Chart — Common Values
Every value uses the exact constant 1 ft = 304.8 mm. Values that are exact multiples of 304.8 mm produce exact integer or terminating foot results; all others are non-terminating, shown here to 4 decimal places. Highlighted rows mark exact imperial anchors and common construction benchmarks.
| Millimeters | Feet | Inches | ft & in | Common Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 mm | 0.0033 ft | 0.0394 in | 0 ft 0.04 in | 1 mm — credit card thickness; pencil lead |
| 10 mm | 0.0328 ft | 0.3937 in | 0 ft 0.39 in | 10 mm — 1 cm; finger width |
| 25.4 mm | 0.0833 ft | 1.0000 in | 0 ft 1.00 in | 25.4 mm — exactly 1 inch (defined constant) |
| 100 mm | 0.3281 ft | 3.9370 in | 0 ft 3.94 in | 100 mm — 10 cm; large tile size |
| 304.8 mm | 1.0000 ft | 12.0000 in | 1 ft 0.00 in | 304.8 mm — exactly 1 foot (defined constant) |
| 500 mm | 1.6404 ft | 19.6850 in | 1 ft 7.69 in | 500 mm — 0.5 m; standard desk depth |
| 914.4 mm | 3.0000 ft | 36.0000 in | 3 ft 0.00 in | 914.4 mm — exactly 1 yard (36 inches) |
| 1,000 mm | 3.2808 ft | 39.3701 in | 3 ft 3.37 in | 1,000 mm — exactly 1 meter |
| 1,524 mm | 5.0000 ft | 60.0000 in | 5 ft 0.00 in | 1,524 mm — exactly 5 feet |
| 1,700 mm | 5.5774 ft | 66.9291 in | 5 ft 6.93 in | 1,700 mm — approx. global average adult height |
| 1,828.8 mm | 6.0000 ft | 72.0000 in | 6 ft 0.00 in | 1,828.8 mm — exactly 6 feet |
| 2,000 mm | 6.5617 ft | 78.7402 in | 6 ft 6.74 in | 2,000 mm — 2 m; standard door height |
| 2,438 mm | 7.9987 ft | 95.9843 in | 8 ft 0.00 in | 2,438.4 mm — exactly 8 feet (standard drywall height) |
| 3,048 mm | 10.0000 ft | 120.0000 in | 10 ft 0.00 in | 3,048 mm — exactly 10 feet (basketball hoop) |
| 10,000 mm | 32.8084 ft | 393.7008 in | 32 ft 9.70 in | 10,000 mm — 10 meters; large room span |
Highlighted rows are exact — values that are exact multiples of 304.8 mm produce terminating foot results. All others are non-terminating; shown to 4 d.p. here.
Millimeters to Feet — Reference by Context
The millimeter-to-feet conversion is most common in three professional settings: construction and architecture, where metric framing, flooring, and cladding dimensions in millimeters must be expressed in the feet and inches format of U.S. and UK plans; manufacturing and engineering, where CNC machined part dimensions in millimeters must be communicated to U.S. clients or referenced against imperial-dimensioned drawings; and medical and athletic contexts where body measurements taken in millimeters must be recorded in the ft & in format of U.S. and UK health records.
| Millimeters | Feet & Inches | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 610 mm | 2 ft 0.01 in | Standard stair tread depth |
| 762 mm | 2 ft 6.00 in | Standard door width (interior) |
| 813 mm | 2 ft 8.02 in | Standard U.S. door width (32 in) |
| 914.4 mm | 3 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 1 yard; wide doorway |
| 1,219 mm | 3 ft 11.97 in | Standard plywood/drywall width (4 ft) |
| 1,524 mm | 5 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 5 feet; ADA clearance width |
| 1,828.8 mm | 6 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 6 feet; standard fence height |
| 2,032 mm | 6 ft 7.97 in | Standard door height (6 ft 8 in) |
| 2,438.4 mm | 8 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 8 feet; standard drywall sheet |
| 2,743 mm | 9 ft 0.04 in | Standard 9 ft ceiling height |
| 3,048 mm | 10 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 10 feet; basketball hoop |
| 3,658.8 mm | 12 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 12 feet; wide garage door |
| 4,877 mm | 15 ft 11.99 in | ~16 ft room width |
| 6,096 mm | 20 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 20 feet; shipping container |
| 12,192 mm | 40 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 40 feet; large container |
| Millimeters | Feet & Inches | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 500 mm | 1 ft 7.69 in | Average newborn length |
| 900 mm | 2 ft 11.43 in | Average toddler height (18 months) |
| 1,200 mm | 3 ft 11.24 in | Average height, age 7–8 |
| 1,524 mm | 5 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 5 feet; avg. female (India) |
| 1,570 mm | 5 ft 1.81 in | Average Indian adult female height |
| 1,600 mm | 5 ft 2.99 in | Average global adult female height |
| 1,700 mm | 5 ft 6.93 in | Approx. global avg. adult height |
| 1,750 mm | 5 ft 8.90 in | Average global adult male height |
| 1,770 mm | 5 ft 9.69 in | Average Indian adult male height |
| 1,800 mm | 5 ft 10.87 in | Tall male reference height |
| 1,828.8 mm | 6 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 6 feet; common height ref. |
| 1,900 mm | 6 ft 2.80 in | Very tall: approx. 6 ft 3 in |
| 2,000 mm | 6 ft 6.74 in | Exceptionally tall; 2 m barrier |
| 2,150 mm | 7 ft 0.65 in | Approx. NBA average player height |
| 4,572 mm | 15 ft 0.00 in | Exactly 15 feet; pole vault height ref. |
Millimeters to Feet — Key Conversion Numbers
The Millimeters to Feet Converter Is Built For You If…
Whether you’re a joiner whose metric saw cuts dimensions in millimeters but whose U.S. client needs plans in feet and inches, a physician converting a wall-gauge height reading in millimeters into the ft & in format of a U.S. medical record, a structural engineer translating a European steel section dimension from millimeters to the decimal-foot format of a U.S. specification, or an athlete whose reach measurement in millimeters must be entered in feet for a North American competition database — this converter delivers an exact, documented result in seconds.
Construction, Architecture & Interior Design Professionals
Plans, dimensions & material specificationsConstruction projects in metric countries regularly supply materials and details dimensioned in millimeters, but U.S. clients, architects, and building codes often require feet and inches. A contractor receiving a 2,438 mm wall height specification needs to confirm it is 8 ft exactly for a U.S. drywall order. An interior designer specifying a 600 mm deep wardrobe needs 1 ft 11.62 in for a U.S. client’s furniture layout. A tiler ordering 300 mm × 600 mm tiles needs to express those dimensions in inches for a U.S. materials supplier: 11.811 in × 23.622 in. An architect dimensioning a 3,660 mm room span needs 12.0079 ft for a U.S. calculation sheet.
- Use 2–3 decimal places for architectural plans; 4 for structural calculations
- Key exact anchors: 304.8 mm = 1 ft; 1219.2 mm = 4 ft; 2438.4 mm = 8 ft; 3048 mm = 10 ft
- The composite ft & in display matches U.S. plan notation: “6′ 0″” for 1828.8 mm
- Export PDF for client presentations, tender documents, and material order sheets
Engineers, Machinists & Manufacturing Professionals
Tolerances, part dimensions & cross-system documentationPrecision manufacturing and engineering constantly bridges metric and imperial systems. A CNC machinist whose program outputs dimensions in millimeters needs to cross-check against a U.S. customer’s imperial drawing. A mechanical engineer specifying a 457 mm beam depth needs 1.4993 ft (or 17.9921 in) for a U.S. structural calculation. A toolmaker whose gauge block set is calibrated in millimeters needs to verify that a 25.4 mm reference block is exactly 1 inch. A quality inspector measuring a 2.54 mm gap needs to confirm it is exactly 0.1 in (100 thou) for a U.S. tolerance document. Use 4–6 decimal places for engineering precision; 7–8 for metrology.
- Use 4–6 decimal places for engineering tolerances; 7–8 for metrology and precision gauging
- Key anchors: 25.4 mm = 1 in exactly; 304.8 mm = 1 ft exactly; 914.4 mm = 1 yd exactly
- Only multiples of 25.4 mm produce exact inch results — use this to spot-check conversions
- Export PDF for cross-system engineering documentation and quality assurance records
Healthcare, Medical & Athletic Professionals
Heights, clinical records & sports measurementsClinical height gauges and precision measuring rods often output in millimeters, but U.S. and UK medical records, insurance forms, and athlete registration databases require feet and inches. A nurse reading a stadiometer at 1,753 mm needs to enter 5 ft 9.02 in (or 5′ 9″) on a U.S. patient intake form. A strength coach recording an athlete’s reach of 2,159 mm needs 7 ft 0.98 in for a North American scouting report. A pediatrician logging a child’s height of 1,092 mm needs 3 ft 6.98 in for a U.S. growth chart entry. The composite ft & in display matches the format of every U.S. and UK health record exactly.
- Use 2 decimal places in the composite inches for medical records (“5 ft 9.02 in”)
- Key height anchors: 1524 mm = 5 ft exactly; 1828.8 mm = 6 ft exactly
- The composite ft & in display matches U.S. patient forms and athlete profile sheets
- Export PDF for clinical records, sports scouting profiles, and fitness assessment files
7 Tips for Accurate Millimeters to Feet Conversions
Dividing by 304.8 is straightforward but crosses the metric-imperial boundary — the conversion class most prone to rounding errors, unit label confusion, and precision mismatches in professional documents, especially when millimeter-based measurement instruments meet foot-and-inch-based drawing formats and databases.
The Formula Is ft = mm ÷ 304.8 — Exact, but Usually Non-Terminating
The constant 304.8 is exact: 1 ft = 12 in × 25.4 mm/in = 304.8 mm exactly. However, dividing by 304.8 typically produces a non-terminating repeating decimal, because 1/304.8 = 5/1524 and 1524 has the prime factor 127 (not 2 or 5). Only mm values that are exact multiples of 304.8 — such as 304.8, 609.6, 914.4, 1219.2, 1524, 1828.8, 3048 mm — produce terminating (exact) foot results. Use the precision slider to control display rounding for all other inputs.
Memorize the Five Key mm-to-ft Anchors
For everyday use: 25.4 mm = 1 in exactly · 304.8 mm = 1 ft exactly · 914.4 mm = 3 ft (1 yd) exactly · 1,524 mm = 5 ft exactly · 1,828.8 mm = 6 ft exactly. With these five anchors, you can bracket any millimeter value: 1,700 mm is between 1,524 mm (5 ft) and 1,828.8 mm (6 ft), so it lies between 5 and 6 feet — and the calculator confirms 5.5774 ft.
Use the Inch Result, Not the Foot Result, for Most Construction Checks
For construction and manufacturing, the inch result is often more useful than the foot result for a quick sanity check: 1,000 mm = 39.37 in, not 3.2808 ft. Integer-inch values are far easier to recognize as correct on a tape measure. If the inch result is close to a whole number, check that it is a multiple of 25.4 mm. For plan dimensions, convert to composite ft & in for the final notation: 1,000 mm = “3 ft 3.37 in” which on a U.S. plan would be written as 3′ 3⅜″ (3 feet 3⅜ inches).
For Medical Heights, Record to the Nearest 0.01 in in the Composite
U.S. and UK medical height records conventionally use ft & in to the nearest quarter-inch (0.25 in) or eighth-inch (0.125 in). A stadiometer reading of 1,753 mm = 5 ft 9.02 in, which rounds to “5′ 9″” on a patient form. A reading of 1,791 mm = 5 ft 10.47 in, which rounds to “5′ 10″” or “5′ 10½″” depending on the form’s precision requirement. The calculator’s composite display shows the exact remainder in inches — round appropriately for your documentation standard.
For Engineering Tolerances, Use 4–6 Decimal Places
A tolerance of ±0.1 mm = ±0.00328 ft = ±0.00394 in. Expressing this requires at least 3 decimal places in feet or 3 in inches to distinguish it from ±0.2 mm. For tighter tolerances (±0.01 mm), use 4–5 decimal places. For metrology and precision gauging (±0.001 mm), use 6–7. The calculator’s default of 4 decimal places is the minimum for professional engineering documentation. Set the precision slider to 6 for any tolerance work involving parts below 10 mm in size.
Watch for the ft vs in Unit Label Error in Specifications
The most common documentation error in mm-to-imperial conversion is confusing a decimal foot value with an inch value. A beam depth of 457 mm = 1.4993 ft is not 1.4993 in (which would be 38.1 mm — a pencil). Always verify the unit label on the destination field. A quick sanity check: 1 ft ≈ 300 mm, so any mm value above ~300 should produce a ft result above 1. If your ft result is below 1, the dimension is less than a foot and the composite display will show “0 ft X.XX in” — verify this is the expected scale.
Use the PDF for Cross-System Documentation
For professional deliverables that serve both metric and imperial readers — construction specification packages, manufacturing drawing notes, clinical measurement records, or athlete profile sheets — download the PDF and attach it to the project file. It captures the exact mm input, all converted outputs at your chosen precision, the constants (1 ft = 304.8 mm, 1 in = 25.4 mm, 1 yd = 914.4 mm), the composite ft & in breakdown, the 15-row reference table with imperial benchmarks, and the generation date — a complete, traceable conversion record for both metric and imperial stakeholders.
Millimeters to Feet Converter — Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about converting millimeters to feet, why 1 ft = 304.8 mm, the precise foot values for key millimeter dimensions, and how to apply this calculator accurately across construction, engineering, medical, and athletic applications.
To convert millimeters to feet, divide the millimeter value by 304.8. The formula is: ft = mm ÷ 304.8. For example, 1,000 mm ÷ 304.8 = 3.28084 ft. The constant 304.8 is exact, derived from 1 ft = 12 in and 1 in = 25.4 mm (both exact under the International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959): 12 × 25.4 = 304.8 mm exactly.
Because 1/304.8 is a non-terminating decimal, most mm-to-ft results require rounding at some decimal place. Only multiples of 304.8 mm produce exact terminating foot results: 304.8 mm = 1 ft, 914.4 mm = 3 ft, 1524 mm = 5 ft, 1828.8 mm = 6 ft, 3048 mm = 10 ft. The precision slider controls how many decimal places are shown.
1,000 mm equals 3.28084 feet (1000 ÷ 304.8 = 3.2808398…, a non-terminating decimal shown to 5 d.p.). In inches: 39.3701 in (1000 ÷ 25.4, also non-terminating). In the composite display: 3 ft 3.37 in. In metric: 1,000 mm = 1 m exactly = 100 cm exactly.
1,000 mm / 1 meter is the most common reference anchor for this conversion. It arises constantly in construction (metric door and ceiling heights), furniture (1 m worktop depth), engineering (1 m rule lengths), and athletics (1 m barriers). Use the 1,000 mm (1 m) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
304.8 mm equals exactly 1 foot. This is the defined international constant: 1 ft = 304.8 mm exactly, derived from 1 ft = 12 in × 25.4 mm/in = 304.8 mm. In inches: 12.0000 in exactly. In the composite display: 1 ft 0.00 in. In metric: 304.8 mm = 30.48 cm exactly = 0.3048 m exactly.
304.8 mm = 1 ft is the most important anchor for this conversion. Every multiple of 304.8 mm produces an exact integer foot result: 609.6 mm = 2 ft, 914.4 mm = 3 ft, 1219.2 mm = 4 ft, and so on. Use the 304.8 mm (1 ft) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
1,828.8 mm equals exactly 6 feet (1828.8 ÷ 304.8 = 6 exactly). This is an exact result. In inches: 72 in exactly. In the composite display: 6 ft 0.00 in. In metric: 1,828.8 mm = 182.88 cm exactly = 1.8288 m exactly.
1,828.8 mm / 6 ft is a widely cited reference in athletics (athlete registration databases), medicine (tall patient height), and architecture (minimum clearance for tall individuals). The basketball hoop height (10 ft) = 3,048 mm exactly. Use the 1,828.8 mm (6 ft) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
25.4 mm equals exactly 0.0833 feet (25.4 ÷ 304.8 = 1/12 ft, a non-terminating repeating decimal — 0.083333…). More usefully: 25.4 mm = exactly 1 inch. This is the foundational defined constant of the international metric-imperial system: 1 in = 25.4 mm exactly. In the composite display: 0 ft 1.00 in.
25.4 mm = 1 in is the anchor that makes every mm-to-ft conversion exact at the formula level. Because 1 ft = 12 in and 1 in = 25.4 mm, every multiple of 25.4 mm produces a whole-number inch result. Use the 25.4 mm (1 in) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
914.4 mm equals exactly 3 feet (or 1 yard): 914.4 ÷ 304.8 = 3 exactly. In inches: 36 in exactly. In the composite display: 3 ft 0.00 in. In metric: 914.4 mm = 91.44 cm exactly = 0.9144 m exactly.
914.4 mm / 1 yard is used in fabric measurement (yard of fabric), sports field layout (American football yard lines), garden and landscaping plans, and any context where the yard is the preferred imperial distance unit. Use the 914.4 mm (1 yd) preset chip for the full unit breakdown.
Dividing by 304.8 often produces a non-terminating decimal because 1/304.8 = 5/1524, and 1524 = 4 × 3 × 127. Since 127 is a prime factor that is neither 2 nor 5, the decimal expansion of 1/304.8 is non-terminating and repeating. A decimal terminates if and only if its denominator (in lowest terms) has no prime factors other than 2 and 5.
By contrast, all metric-to-metric conversions on this site divide by exact powers of 10 (denominators of 2ⁿ × 5ⁿ only), so they always terminate. The mm-to-ft conversion crosses the metric–imperial boundary, introducing the factor 127 from the fraction 1/127 = 0.00787401… (non-terminating). Only multiples of 304.8 mm cancel this factor and produce terminating results. The precision slider lets you control how many decimal places are displayed.
A foot is exactly 304.8 times larger than a millimeter: 1 ft = 304.8 mm. The foot is an imperial unit approximately the length of a human foot; the millimeter is 1/1000 of a meter (SI metric), roughly the thickness of a credit card or pencil lead. In everyday terms: a foot is roughly the length of a standard 30 cm ruler; a millimeter is the smallest graduation on most metric tape measures.
Millimeters are used in precision engineering, manufacturing tolerances, technical drawings, medical instrument outputs, and construction detail work where sub-centimeter precision is essential. Feet are used in U.S. and UK construction, real estate, aviation altitudes, ceiling heights, athletic event records, and general measurement wherever the imperial system is standard. Both can express any length — the choice is context and regional convention, not precision.
The calculator uses the exact constant 1 ft = 304.8 mm (derived from 1 in = 25.4 mm exactly × 12 in/ft) with double-precision floating-point arithmetic, accurate to approximately 15 significant digits. The display rounds to your chosen precision (0–8 decimal places). Because 1/304.8 is a non-terminating decimal, all displayed foot results are rounded at the chosen precision — there is no exact terminating value for most inputs.
All metric outputs (cm, m, km) use exact powers of 10. Imperial outputs (in, yd) use the exact defined constants 1 in = 25.4 mm and 1 yd = 914.4 mm. The miles output uses the exact constant 1 mi = 1,609,344 mm. The downloadable PDF records all outputs and the base conversion constants with the generation date.
Accuracy note: The HomeExpertly Millimeters to Feet Converter uses the exact international constant 1 in = 25.4 mm and the exact integer relationship 1 ft = 12 in, giving 1 ft = 304.8 mm exactly (established by the International Yard and Pound Agreement, July 1, 1959, recognized by NIST and BIPM). Because 1/304.8 is a non-terminating repeating decimal (denominator in lowest terms contains the prime factor 127), most mm-to-ft results are rounded at the chosen display precision — the precision slider controls the number of decimal places shown, not a formula-level approximation. All metric outputs (cm, m, km) are exact. Imperial outputs (in, yd) use the exact constants 1 in = 25.4 mm and 1 yd = 914.4 mm. The miles output uses the exact constant 1 mi = 1,609,344 mm. All calculations are performed with double-precision floating-point arithmetic accurate to approximately 15 significant digits. Results are for informational and reference purposes only. For applications where measurement accuracy is critical — including but not limited to construction specifications, precision manufacturing, medical records, aviation documentation, or official athletic records — 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.
