Meters to Feet Converter
Instantly convert meters to feet, inches, yards, and more — with live precision control, quick presets, and a downloadable PDF report.
Uses the exact factor 1 m = 3.28084 ft — for reference only.
| Meters | Feet | Feet & Inches | Inches |
|---|
Meters to Feet Conversion — Complete Guide for 2026
Converting meters to feet is one of the most common unit-conversion tasks in construction, real estate, athletics, science, and international travel. Whenever a metric measurement from a global drawing, building specification, or product data sheet needs to be expressed in the imperial system used by the United States, the conversion rests on one exact relationship: 1 foot = 0.3048 meters exactly. Dividing your meter value by 0.3048 — or equivalently multiplying by 3.28084 — gives you a result derived from a mathematically precise international standard.
Our free Meters to Feet Converter performs this calculation with up to 8 decimal places and automatically outputs results across the full unit ladder — feet (decimal), feet and inches (mixed notation), total inches, yards, centimeters, millimeters, kilometers, and miles — alongside a live bar chart and a downloadable 2-page PDF report formatted for professional documentation.
How to Use the Meters to Feet Converter in 4 Steps
A complete conversion takes under five seconds. Enter your meter value, set your precision, review every unit output simultaneously, and download a PDF report you can attach to project documentation, client deliverables, or technical packages.
Enter Your Meter Value
Type any meter measurement into the input field — whole numbers or decimals both work. The calculator handles everything from sub-centimeter fractions (0.001 m) to large structural spans and geographic distances with identical mathematical accuracy. Use the Quick Preset chips (1 m, 1.8 m, 5 m, 10 m, 100 m, 1 km) for common values. Results update live on every keystroke.
Set Decimal Precision
Choose between 0 and 8 decimal places using the input field or the precision slider. Use 0–2 for signage, general communication, and everyday estimates; 3–4 for construction layouts, real estate, and architectural drawing review; and 6–8 for surveying, scientific research, and engineering tolerances. The slider and number input stay in sync — adjust either one and all results recalculate instantly.
Review the Full Breakdown
The hero result shows your primary feet value in large type with a confirmation sub-line showing both decimal feet and feet-and-inches notation. Three summary cards display feet & inches, total inches, and yards at a glance. The full conversion grid below adds centimeters, millimeters, kilometers, and miles — all derived from the same exact calculation. The bar chart maps all five primary values visually by magnitude on a log scale.
Download Your PDF Report
Click Download PDF for a professionally formatted 2-page report. Page 1 includes the branded header, hero result card, metric/imperial side-by-side breakdown table, six labeled summary cards, and an embedded chart snapshot. Page 2 adds a 16-row reference table (0.5 m to 1000 m) with the row nearest your input highlighted in blue, plus a formula note box — formatted for construction packages, client deliverables, and project audit files.
Why 1 Foot = 0.3048 Meters Exactly
The globally agreed, mathematically exact definition of the foot in metric terms dates to July 1, 1959, when six nations — the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa — signed the International Yard and Pound Agreement. The treaty defined the yard as exactly 0.9144 meters, making the foot exactly 0.3048 meters and the inch exactly 0.0254 meters (25.4 mm) — all to infinite decimal places, with no rounding whatsoever.
Before this agreement, different countries maintained slightly different foot definitions. The U.S. survey foot was approximately 0.30480061 meters, while the British foot aligned more closely with the imperial standard. These differences were invisible in everyday use but caused measurable discrepancies in international engineering projects, precision manufacturing, aerospace parts catalogs, and land survey records that crossed national boundaries. The 1959 agreement eliminated all of it by anchoring the foot to the metric system — the language of modern science and global trade.
What a repeating decimal conversion factor means for your result
Unlike the inch-to-millimeter conversion (where 1 inch = 25.4 mm is a terminating decimal), the meter-to-foot factor is a repeating decimal: 3.280839895013123… This is because 1 ÷ 0.3048 does not resolve to a finite decimal. In practice, this means no meter value converts to a perfectly terminating decimal in feet unless the meter value itself is a specific multiple of 0.3048. For example, 3.048 m = exactly 10 ft, and 0.3048 m = exactly 1 ft. For all other values, the result will be truncated or rounded at whatever precision you select.
The calculator uses double-precision floating-point arithmetic (approximately 15 significant digits of accuracy), which is orders of magnitude more precise than any physical tape measure or laser distance tool. At 4 decimal places, your result is accurate to within 0.00005 feet — about 0.015 mm — far more than enough for any construction or engineering application.
What the Meters to Feet Converter Calculates
Every output is derived from the same single division — no intermediate rounding between units — giving you a complete imperial and metric breakdown in one instant calculation.
Decimal Feet (Hero Result)
The primary conversion divides your meter value by the exact international constant 0.3048. The displayed result is rounded only to your chosen precision — the underlying calculation uses full double-precision arithmetic. Decimal feet is the format used in U.S. engineering drawings, architectural plans, surveying records, and real estate measurements where sub-inch accuracy is needed without switching to feet-and-inches mixed notation.
Feet & Inches (Mixed Notation)
The feet-and-inches format — e.g. 5 ft 10.87 in — is the everyday U.S. standard for human height, ceiling height, room dimensions, and door sizes. The calculator computes this automatically: whole feet are extracted from the decimal feet result, and the remaining decimal is multiplied by 12 to get the inches component. Both the summary card and the result grid display this simultaneously alongside decimal feet.
Total Inches & Yards
Total inches (meters × 39.3701) gives the full inch count without breaking into feet — useful for fabric, material lengths, and specifications that reference inches only. Yards (meters × 1.09361) is the unit for U.S. landscaping, fabric yardage, and American football field measurements. Both are derived directly from the meter value to avoid accumulated rounding from intermediate foot conversion.
Centimeters & Millimeters
Centimeters (meters × 100) and millimeters (meters × 1000) keep the output in the metric system for applications that need both unit families simultaneously — for example, comparing a metric specification against an imperial constraint. These are also useful when the meter value represents something measured in centimeters on a drawing, where the mm output provides the finest metric resolution without requiring a separate calculation.
Visual Bar Chart
A horizontal five-bar chart plots the numeric magnitude of your value across meters, feet, inches, yards, and centimeters in five distinct colors on a logarithmic scale. The log scale handles the enormous range between units elegantly — a 1-meter input shows centimeters (100) and inches (39.37) as much larger bars than meters (1) without distorting the visual. The chart captures cleanly into the PDF report for presentations and documentation.
2-Page PDF Report
Page 1 contains the branded header, hero result, metric/imperial breakdown table, six summary cards (input value, feet decimal, feet and inches, total inches, yards, centimeters), and chart snapshot. Page 2 contains a 16-row reference table spanning 0.5 m to 1000 m with the row nearest your input highlighted, plus a formula note. Formatted for professional use in supplier orders, design packages, real estate documentation, and project audit records.
Meters to Feet Conversion Chart — Common Values
Every value in this table is derived from the exact relationship 1 foot = 0.3048 meters. Bookmark this page or use the PDF download for a printable version to keep at your desk, on site, or in your project files.
| Meters | Feet (decimal) | Feet & Inches | Inches | Common Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.3048 m | 1.0000 ft | 1 ft 0.00 in | 12.000 in | Exactly 1 foot — defined constant |
| 0.5 m | 1.6404 ft | 1 ft 7.69 in | 19.685 in | Half-meter reference, tile border |
| 1 m | 3.2808 ft | 3 ft 3.37 in | 39.370 in | Standard meter — door width, desk height |
| 1.5 m | 4.9213 ft | 4 ft 11.06 in | 59.055 in | Counter height, standard fence panel |
| 1.8 m | 5.9055 ft | 5 ft 10.87 in | 70.866 in | Average adult height (metric countries) |
| 2 m | 6.5617 ft | 6 ft 6.74 in | 78.740 in | Standard doorway clearance height |
| 2.4 m | 7.8740 ft | 7 ft 10.49 in | 94.488 in | Standard ceiling height (metric) |
| 3 m | 9.8425 ft | 9 ft 10.11 in | 118.11 in | Commercial ceiling height, large room |
| 5 m | 16.4042 ft | 16 ft 4.85 in | 196.85 in | Standard parking bay length |
| 10 m | 32.8084 ft | 32 ft 9.70 in | 393.70 in | 3-story building height, mid-size room span |
| 20 m | 65.6168 ft | 65 ft 7.40 in | 787.40 in | 6-story building, large commercial span |
| 30 m | 98.4252 ft | 98 ft 5.10 in | 1181.1 in | 9–10 story building, suspension bridge tower |
| 50 m | 164.042 ft | 164 ft 0.50 in | 1968.5 in | Olympic swimming pool length, 15-story building |
| 100 m | 328.084 ft | 328 ft 1.01 in | 3937.0 in | Sprint track distance, 30-story building |
| 0.9144 m | 3.0000 ft | 3 ft 0.00 in | 36.000 in | Exactly 1 yard — defined constant |
| 1000 m (1 km) | 3280.84 ft | 3280 ft 10.08 in | 39370 in | 1 kilometer — 0.6214 miles |
Converting Human Heights: Meters to Feet and Inches
Height is one of the most common contexts for meters-to-feet conversion. People in metric countries describe their height in meters and centimeters (e.g. 1.75 m), while people in the U.S. use feet and inches (e.g. 5’9″). The table below covers the full range of typical adult heights from 1.50 m to 2.10 m in 5 cm steps, along with the precise feet-and-inches equivalent.
| Meters | Feet & Inches | Decimal ft |
|---|---|---|
| 1.50 m | 4 ft 11.06 in | 4.9213 ft |
| 1.55 m | 5 ft 1.03 in | 5.0853 ft |
| 1.60 m | 5 ft 2.99 in | 5.2493 ft |
| 1.65 m | 5 ft 4.96 in | 5.4134 ft |
| 1.70 m | 5 ft 6.93 in | 5.5774 ft |
| 1.75 m | 5 ft 8.90 in | 5.7415 ft |
| 1.80 m | 5 ft 10.87 in | 5.9055 ft |
| 1.85 m | 6 ft 0.84 in | 6.0696 ft |
| Meters | Feet & Inches | Decimal ft |
|---|---|---|
| 1.90 m | 6 ft 2.80 in | 6.2336 ft |
| 1.95 m | 6 ft 4.77 in | 6.3976 ft |
| 2.00 m | 6 ft 6.74 in | 6.5617 ft |
| 2.05 m | 6 ft 8.71 in | 6.7257 ft |
| 2.10 m | 6 ft 10.68 in | 6.8898 ft |
| 2.15 m | 7 ft 0.64 in | 7.0538 ft |
| 2.20 m | 7 ft 2.61 in | 7.2178 ft |
| 2.44 m | 8 ft 0.05 in | 8.0052 ft |
Meters to Feet — Key Conversion Numbers
The Meters to Feet Converter Is Built For You If…
Whether you’re an architect reviewing international drawings in metric, a traveler trying to understand room dimensions abroad, or a contractor comparing metric and imperial specifications on the same project — this converter gives you an exact, documented result in seconds.
Architects & Construction Professionals
Drawings, specifications & site workArchitects, structural engineers, and site managers working on international projects or with metric-trained subcontractors regularly translate meter-based dimensions from global building codes, manufacturer data sheets, and imported drawings into the feet-and-inches notation used in the U.S. An incorrect conversion in a structural drawing can mean rework, failed inspections, and project delays that cost far more than the original scope.
- Use 3–4 decimal precision for architectural layouts and structural dimensions
- Use the feet-and-inches output card to quickly communicate height and clearance to U.S. tradespeople
- Cross-check kilometer/mile output when scaling site plans between metric and imperial drawing sets
- Export the PDF to attach to RFI responses, submittal packages, and project meeting notes
International Travelers & Expats
Heights, distances & everyday measurementAmericans abroad routinely encounter room dimensions, building heights, road distances, and product specifications in meters. Travelers from metric countries visiting the U.S. face the inverse problem — feet everywhere, meters nowhere. Quick, accurate conversion is essential for booking hotel rooms, understanding driving distances, describing height on medical forms, and shopping for goods with dimensional specifications.
- Use 1–2 decimal precision for everyday estimates — plenty for travel contexts
- Bookmark the 1.8 m = 5 ft 10.87 in anchor for quick human-height comparisons
- Use the km/miles output for road trip distance conversions between metric and imperial navigation
- Use Quick Presets for the most common travel dimensions: 1 m, 1.8 m, 5 m, 10 m
Athletes, Coaches & Sports Officials
Track, field & competition distancesTrack and field, swimming, cycling, and most global sports use metric distances — 100 m sprint, 1500 m race, 50 m pool, 7.26 kg shot put throw distance. U.S. broadcast audiences, coaches, and athletes frequently need feet-and-yards equivalents for comparison, record-keeping, and communication with American sports media. Accurate conversion prevents confusion between record distances and announced marks.
- 100 m = 328.084 ft = 109.361 yd — the essential sprint track anchor
- Use 3 decimal precision for official athletic marks and competition records
- 50 m pool = 164.042 ft — essential for U.S. swim meet documentation
- Export PDF reports for official meet programs and press release fact sheets
7 Tips for Accurate Meters to Feet Conversions
Dividing by 0.3048 is simple, but a few habits prevent the errors that surface when metric and imperial measurements meet on the same project.
Never Round the Conversion Factor
Using 3.28 instead of 3.28084 introduces a 0.026% error — about 2.6 mm per meter. On a 10-meter room, that’s 26 mm — over an inch — of accumulated error. On a 100-meter building footprint, it’s 260 mm. Always use the full factor: 1 m = 3.28084 ft, or better, let this calculator do it at the precision you need. Round the result, never the factor.
Understand Decimal Feet vs Feet & Inches
Decimal feet (e.g. 5.9055 ft) and feet-and-inches (e.g. 5 ft 10.87 in) represent the same measurement in different notations. Decimal feet is used on engineering drawings and in calculations. Feet-and-inches is used in everyday U.S. communication, on tape measures, and in building trades. The calculator outputs both simultaneously — pick the format that matches your audience and application.
Memorize These Five Anchors
A small set of anchors covers most everyday estimation: 0.3048 m = 1 ft exactly, 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft, 1.8 m ≈ 5’11”, 3.048 m = 10 ft exactly, 100 m ≈ 328 ft. Knowing these lets you instantly sanity-check any calculator result — if 2 meters comes back as 2.56 ft, you know immediately it is wrong (should be about 6.56 ft). The exact 10 ft anchor (3.048 m) is especially useful for building height estimates.
Set Precision to Match the Application
0–1 decimal places for signage and general communication, 2 for product comparisons and real estate, 3–4 for architectural and construction drawings, 6–8 for surveying, scientific measurement, and engineering tolerances. Selecting higher precision than needed is harmless — selecting too low can introduce a rounding difference that matters in tight tolerances or multi-step calculations that compound the error.
Watch for Nominal vs Actual Building Dimensions
Metric building specifications often use nominal round numbers that differ from actual dimensions. A “3-meter ceiling” in a metric country may actually measure 2.97 m to the finished surface. A “standard 2.1-meter door” may be 2.085 m actual. Always convert the measured dimension — not the nominal label — when checking clearances, ordering materials, or writing cross-system specifications. Verify actual dimensions on site before converting.
Cross-Check Large Distances with km/Miles Output
When converting large meter values — site boundaries, road distances, geographic coordinates — use the kilometer and miles outputs to verify scale. A site described as “500 meters” should appear as 0.5 km and 0.311 miles. If the km output looks wrong for the context (e.g., the site is described verbally as “half a kilometer” but the output shows 5 km), you have caught a decimal point error before it propagates into drawings or specifications.
Use the PDF as a Permanent Project Record
For professional deliverables — architectural drawings, supplier specifications, engineering packages, real estate appraisals, or permit applications — download the PDF conversion report and attach it to your project file. It records the exact input in meters, all converted outputs, the conversion standard, and the generation date. If a dimension is ever questioned during inspection, contract review, or dispute, you have a timestamped record showing the conversion was performed correctly.
Meters to Feet Converter — Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about converting meters to feet, the history of the 0.3048-meter foot definition, feet-and-inches mixed notation, and how to apply this calculator accurately across construction, travel, athletics, and everyday projects.
To convert meters to feet, multiply the meter value by 3.28084. The formula is: feet = meters × 3.28084. For example, 5 meters × 3.28084 = 16.4042 feet.
For feet and inches notation, separate the whole number (feet) and multiply the decimal remainder by 12 to get the inches: 16.4042 ft = 16 feet + (0.4042 × 12) = 16 ft 4.85 in. The calculator above performs all steps automatically with up to 8 decimal places and outputs every related unit simultaneously.
1 meter equals 3.28084 feet, or 3 feet 3.3701 inches in mixed notation. The precise repeating value is 3.280839895013123… feet — derived from the exact definition 1 foot = 0.3048 meters.
Key values: 1.8 m = 5 ft 10.87 in (typical adult height) · 2 m = 6 ft 6.74 in (standard doorway) · 3.048 m = exactly 10 ft · 0.3048 m = exactly 1 ft. To convert feet back to meters, multiply by 0.3048. Enter any meter value in the calculator above for the instant full breakdown.
The exact formula is: feet = meters ÷ 0.3048. Equivalently: feet = meters × 3.280839895… The underlying exact relationship is 1 foot = 0.3048 meters exactly (a defined constant). To reverse: meters = feet × 0.3048.
Quick anchors: 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft · 3 m ≈ 9.843 ft · 10 m ≈ 32.808 ft · 100 m ≈ 328.084 ft. Note that because 1 ÷ 0.3048 is a repeating decimal, no simple meter value (other than multiples of 0.3048) converts to an exactly terminating decimal in feet.
The exact 0.3048-meter definition of the foot was established by the International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959. Six nations agreed to define the yard as exactly 0.9144 meters, making the foot exactly 0.3048 meters and the inch exactly 0.0254 meters (25.4 mm) — all exact to infinite decimal places.
Before 1959, the U.S. survey foot was approximately 0.30480061 meters, causing small discrepancies in international engineering and land survey records. The 1959 agreement unified the standard worldwide. NIST officially retired the U.S. survey foot effective January 1, 2023 — completing the global transition to one universal value: 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, everywhere.
1.8 meters equals 5 feet 10.866 inches, or 5.9055 feet in decimal form. The calculation: 1.8 × 3.28084 = 5.9055 ft; 5 whole feet + (0.9055 × 12) = 5 ft 10.866 in.
1.8 m is the benchmark metric height — a person described as 1.80 m tall in a metric country is essentially 5’11” in U.S. terms. In product contexts, 1.8 m is a common height for refrigerators, wardrobe units, and standard fence panels. The quick mental estimate: 1.8 m ≈ “about 6 feet” (actually 5’10.9″).
2 meters equals 6 feet 6.741 inches, or 6.5617 feet in decimal form. The calculation: 2 × 3.28084 = 6.5617 ft; 6 whole feet + (0.5617 × 12) = 6 ft 6.74 in.
2 meters is a standard reference in building and product design — the minimum clear height for a doorway or passage in many international building codes is approximately 2 m. A person at exactly 2 m tall (6’6.74″) is considered very tall in most populations. In U.S. interior design, an 8-foot ceiling (2.4384 m) and a 7-foot door (2.1336 m) bracket the 2-meter reference point.
5 meters equals 16 feet 4.85 inches, or 16.4042 feet in decimal form. The calculation: 5 × 3.28084 = 16.4042 ft; 16 whole feet + (0.4042 × 12) = 16 ft 4.85 in.
5 meters appears in many practical contexts: standard parking bay length, pool depth measurement references, maximum height restrictions in low-clearance garages, and room span dimensions for medium-to-large residential rooms. In U.S. construction terms, 16 feet 4 inches is a common structural bay dimension for light commercial buildings.
To convert meters to feet and inches manually: Step 1 — multiply meters by 3.28084 to get decimal feet. Step 2 — take the whole number as feet. Step 3 — multiply the decimal remainder by 12 to get inches.
Example: 1.75 meters. Step 1: 1.75 × 3.28084 = 5.74147 ft. Step 2: 5 whole feet. Step 3: 0.74147 × 12 = 8.898 inches. Result: 5 ft 8.90 in. The calculator above performs all three steps automatically and shows both decimal feet and mixed notation simultaneously in the results panel. The height reference table on this page pre-computes this for heights from 1.50 m to 2.44 m.
100 meters equals 328.084 feet, or 328 feet 1.008 inches in mixed notation. The calculation is 100 × 3.28084 = 328.084 ft.
100 meters is the signature sprint distance in athletics and one of the most commonly converted metric distances. It equals approximately 109.361 yards — slightly longer than a U.S. football field (100 yards = 91.44 m). In building scale, 328 feet is roughly the height of a 30-story commercial building at standard floor heights. Use the Quick Preset “100 m” chip in the calculator above for the instant full breakdown.
The meter is the SI (International System of Units) base unit of length, used as the standard in most countries for science, engineering, construction, and everyday measurement. The foot is an imperial unit used primarily in the United States — and to a limited extent in the United Kingdom and Canada for certain everyday contexts.
One meter equals 3.28084 feet. The meter is a larger unit: a typical room measures 4–6 meters across (13–20 feet). Because 1 meter is over three feet, metric measurements in meters tend to have smaller numbers than their foot equivalents — which can feel counterintuitive when switching systems. Neither is more accurate; the conversion between them is exact.
The calculator uses the exact relationship 1 foot = 0.3048 meters with double-precision floating-point arithmetic, accurate to approximately 15 significant digits. The display rounds only to your chosen decimal precision — the underlying calculation always uses full accuracy.
For construction and architecture, 3–4 decimal places provide sub-millimeter accuracy — far beyond tape-measure precision. For surveying and scientific measurement, use 6–8 places. For everyday communication, 1–2 decimal places is fine. The downloadable PDF records your chosen precision, the full result set, and the conversion standard, creating a complete auditable record of the conversion.
Accuracy note: The HomeExpertly Meters to Feet Converter uses the exact international conversion relationship of 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, as established by the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement and currently recognized by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM). All calculations are mathematically precise to the decimal precision you select (up to 8 places). The meter-to-foot conversion factor (3.280839895…) is a repeating decimal derived from this exact definition; all displayed values are rounded only at the display step, not during intermediate calculations. Results are for informational and reference purposes only. For applications where measurement accuracy is critical — including but not limited to structural engineering, land surveying, medical height records, legally binding contracts, building permits, or scientific publication — always verify your conversions independently and use calibrated measurement instruments. Display rounding at lower precision settings (0–2 decimal places) may introduce minor differences from the mathematically exact result. Nominal building dimensions may differ from actual measured dimensions; always verify on site before converting. HomeExpertly is not responsible for any consequences arising from the use of these conversions, including mis-sized components, failed inspections, specification mismatches, or project rework. When in doubt, measure the actual dimension, use the highest available precision, and consult a licensed professional for measurement-critical applications.
