Acreage Calculator (USA)
Calculate land area from its dimensions and convert instantly between acres, square feet, square meters, hectares and more. Add a price per acre to estimate land value.
Rectangle area = length × width.
Enter a market price per acre to estimate the parcel's total value.
| Unit | Value |
|---|---|
| Calculate to see all conversions | |
How to Use This Calculator
Pick a shape, enter the dimensions, and the calculator instantly returns the acreage along with conversions to square feet, square meters, hectares, and more — plus a to-scale parcel diagram and an optional land-value estimate.
Choose your parcel shape
Select rectangle, triangle, circle, or trapezoid — or pick “I already know the area” if you just want to convert between units.
Enter the dimensions
Type the length, width, base, height, or diameter in feet, yards, or meters. The labels and units update automatically based on the shape you chose.
Add a price per acre
Optionally enter a market price per acre to estimate the parcel’s total land value alongside the area conversions.
Review results and download PDF
See the acreage, full unit conversions, size comparison, and a to-scale diagram. Generate a branded PDF report to save or share.
What This Calculator Shows You
More than a single number. A complete picture of your land — acreage, a full set of unit conversions, a real-world size comparison, a to-scale parcel diagram, and an optional value estimate.
Total Acreage
Calculates the area of your parcel in acres from its dimensions, using the correct geometry formula for rectangles, triangles, circles, and trapezoids.
Full Unit Conversions
Converts your area into square feet, square yards, square meters, hectares, square kilometers, square miles, and square inches — all at once.
Real-World Size Comparison
Translates abstract acreage into familiar references — football fields, basketball courts, and tennis courts — so you can picture the real size at a glance.
To-Scale Parcel Diagram
Draws your parcel to scale with labeled dimensions, so you can confirm the shape and proportions match the land you’re measuring.
Land Value Estimate
Enter a price per acre and the calculator estimates the parcel’s total value — useful for quick comparisons when evaluating land for sale.
Conversion Table & PDF
Lists every equivalent unit in one table and generates a professional, branded PDF with the diagram and conversions ready to download or share.
Key Acreage Conversions Everyone Should Know
Three People Who Use This Calculator
Whether you’re buying land, planning a project, or just curious how big a lot really is, converting dimensions to acreage makes the numbers meaningful. Here’s how three common profiles use this calculator.
Ray is comparing two rural lots listed with different dimensions — one in feet, one in acres. He wants both on the same footing and a rough value for each based on the local price per acre.
- Enter each lot’s dimensions to get a consistent acreage for both
- Add the local price per acre to estimate and compare total land value
- Use the size comparison to picture how big each parcel really is
- Download a PDF for each lot to compare them side by side
Tara wants to know the acreage of her back yard to plan a garden, order sod, and figure out how much fencing she needs. Her yard is an L-shape she can split into two rectangles.
- Measure each rectangular section and calculate them separately
- Add the areas together for the total square footage and acreage
- Use square feet for ordering materials like sod, mulch, or seed
- Check the to-scale diagram to confirm your measurements look right
Miguel manages several fields and needs acreage for each to plan seed, fertilizer, and irrigation. One field is triangular and another is a trapezoid bordered by a road and a creek.
- Select triangle or trapezoid and enter the measured field dimensions
- Convert to hectares if your inputs are specified per hectare
- Use the acreage to scale seed and fertilizer rates accurately
- Keep the PDF conversions on file for each field for the season
7 Tips for Measuring Land Accurately
Accurate acreage starts with accurate measurements. These seven practical tips help you get a reliable result — and know when to call in a professional.
Break Irregular Lots Into Simple Shapes
Most odd-shaped parcels can be divided into rectangles, triangles, and trapezoids. Calculate each piece, then add the areas together for a far more accurate total than guessing.
Keep Your Units Consistent
Mixing feet and meters is the most common measurement error. Pick one dimension unit and use it for every side before calculating, then convert the result afterward.
Measure From Property Corners, Not Fences
Fences, hedges, and walls are often set inside the legal boundary. Use surveyed corner markers or pins where possible so your area reflects the actual lot, not the landscaping.
Remember 1 Acre = 43,560 Square Feet
Keeping this anchor in mind helps you sanity-check results. If a lot is about 209 by 209 feet, that’s close to one acre — a quick way to catch a measurement that’s off by a decimal.
Use the To-Scale Diagram as a Check
If the drawn parcel looks far too long, thin, or square compared to the real land, you likely transposed a dimension. The diagram is a quick visual sanity check before you rely on the number.
Account for Slope on Hilly Land
Tape measurements across sloped ground overstate the true horizontal area used for acreage. On steep parcels, measure the horizontal distance or rely on a survey for an accurate figure.
Get a Survey for Anything Legal or Financial
Estimates are great for planning, but property purchases, subdivisions, and boundary disputes need a licensed survey. Acreage affects price, taxes, and rights — confirm it officially before you commit.
Frequently Asked Questions
The most common questions people ask about acreage, land area, and converting between acres, square feet, hectares, and other units.
Disclaimer: All results produced by the Acreage Calculator are estimates for educational and illustrative purposes only and do not constitute a survey, appraisal, or legal description of land. Results assume regular shapes and the dimensions you enter — irregular parcels, sloped ground, and curved boundaries can differ significantly. Land value estimates depend entirely on the price per acre you provide and do not reflect an actual appraisal. For legal boundaries, property transactions, subdivisions, or tax purposes, always rely on a licensed surveyor and the recorded plat, and consult a qualified professional before making any decision.
