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Convert Feet to Meters

Instantly convert Feet (ft) to Meters (m) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: ft to mmultiply by 0.3048

Reference Table

Feet (ft)Meters (m)
10.3048
51.524
103.048
257.62
5015.24
10030.48

Feet-to-meters conversions come up daily in construction, aviation, and international real estate. A typical US house ceiling is 8 feet (2.44 m); a commercial jet cruises at 35,000 feet (10,668 m) — a figure quoted in feet by ATC worldwide despite metric adoption in almost every other aviation context. Structural engineers working on US projects against international codes must convert story heights, beam lengths, and column dimensions from feet to meters when running analyses in Eurocode software. One foot is exactly 0.3048 meters by international agreement (1959).

How to Convert Feet to Meters

Formula

To convert Feet (ft) to Meters (m): multiply by 0.3048

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Feet (ft).
  2. Multiply by 0.3048 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Meters (m).

Conversion Factor

1 ft = 0.3048 m

Reverse Factor

1 m = 3.28084 ft

Worked Example

Convert 25 Feet to Meters: 25 ft = 7.62 m

About Foot (ft)

An imperial unit of length equal to exactly 12 inches = 0.3048 meters per the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement. The foot is the most-used imperial length unit in daily life: US construction blueprints and architectural plans (residential / commercial / civil per AIA, IBC, ASCE 7), US real estate listings (square footage, lot frontage), US surveying (the US Survey Foot used in legacy land records is 1200/3937 m ≈ 0.30480061 m, very slightly different from the International Foot; NIST formally retired the US Survey Foot on January 1, 2023), and everyday height measurement in the US and UK ('5 foot 10'). The foot is also the global International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) standard for altitude — flight levels and altimeter readings are quoted in hundreds or thousands of feet worldwide regardless of the country's everyday measurement system. Reference values: standard residential ceiling 8 ft; typical US ranch-house lot 50-75 ft frontage; basketball hoop 10 ft; commercial flight cruise altitude 32,000-42,000 ft; Mount Everest 29,032 ft. A foot divides into 12 inches and three feet make a yard, reflecting the base-12 heritage of English measurement.

About Meter (m)

The base SI unit of length (ISO 80000-3 §3-1), defined since the 1983 CGPM resolution as the distance light travels in vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second — making the speed of light an exact defined constant of nature (c = 299,792,458 m/s exactly) and the meter derived from it via cesium-133 atomic-clock-anchored time. Originally conceived in 1793 as one ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole to the equator through Paris (the 1791 French Academy of Sciences mission that produced the meridian arc measurement), the meter now underpins every other SI unit of length and indirectly every SI base unit since the 2019 redefinition tied the kilogram to the meter via the Planck constant. Scientists, engineers, and most of the world's governments use the meter as the authoritative reference for scale — from atomic physics (typical atomic radius ~10⁻¹⁰ m / 0.1 nm) to building dimensions to map distances. The platinum-iridium International Prototype Meter (BIPM Pavillon de Breteuil, 1889-1960) was the physical reference before the speed-of-light definition replaced it.

Quick Facts

  • 1 Foot equals 0.3048 Meters
  • 1 Meter equals 3.28084 Feet
  • Foot is a unit of length & distance
  • Meter is a unit of length & distance
  • This conversion is commonly used in construction, navigation, athletics, and everyday measurement
  • The Foot belongs to the imperial system
  • The Meter belongs to the metric system

Common Foot to Meter Conversions

Feet (ft)Meters (m)
0.10.03048
0.50.1524
10.3048
20.6096
30.9144
41.2192
51.524
103.048
154.572
206.096
257.62
309.144
4012.192
5015.24
7522.86
10030.48
15045.72
20060.96
25076.2
500152.4
1000304.8

Understanding Feet

The Foot (symbol: ft) is a unit of length & distance. An imperial unit of length equal to exactly 12 inches = 0.3048 meters per the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement. The foot is the most-used imperial length unit in daily life: US construction blueprints and architectural plans (residential / commercial / civil per AIA, IBC, ASCE 7), US real estate listings (square footage, lot frontage), US surveying (the US Survey Foot used in legacy land records is 1200/3937 m ≈ 0.30480061 m, very slightly different from the International Foot; NIST formally retired the US Survey Foot on January 1, 2023), and everyday height measurement in the US and UK ('5 foot 10'). The foot is also the global International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) standard for altitude — flight levels and altimeter readings are quoted in hundreds or thousands of feet worldwide regardless of the country's everyday measurement system. Reference values: standard residential ceiling 8 ft; typical US ranch-house lot 50-75 ft frontage; basketball hoop 10 ft; commercial flight cruise altitude 32,000-42,000 ft; Mount Everest 29,032 ft. A foot divides into 12 inches and three feet make a yard, reflecting the base-12 heritage of English measurement.

It belongs to the imperial measurement system.

Feet are commonly used in construction, navigation, athletics, and everyday measurement.

Understanding Meters

The Meter (symbol: m) is a unit of length & distance. The base SI unit of length (ISO 80000-3 §3-1), defined since the 1983 CGPM resolution as the distance light travels in vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second — making the speed of light an exact defined constant of nature (c = 299,792,458 m/s exactly) and the meter derived from it via cesium-133 atomic-clock-anchored time. Originally conceived in 1793 as one ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole to the equator through Paris (the 1791 French Academy of Sciences mission that produced the meridian arc measurement), the meter now underpins every other SI unit of length and indirectly every SI base unit since the 2019 redefinition tied the kilogram to the meter via the Planck constant. Scientists, engineers, and most of the world's governments use the meter as the authoritative reference for scale — from atomic physics (typical atomic radius ~10⁻¹⁰ m / 0.1 nm) to building dimensions to map distances. The platinum-iridium International Prototype Meter (BIPM Pavillon de Breteuil, 1889-1960) was the physical reference before the speed-of-light definition replaced it.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Meters are commonly used in construction, navigation, athletics, and everyday measurement.

Why Convert Feet to Meters?

Whether you are travelling internationally, working on a construction project, or studying science, converting between Feet and Meters is a task you will encounter regularly. Builders and architects often work with specifications that mix metric and imperial units, while athletes and coaches may need to compare race distances reported in different systems. Having an accurate, instant conversion tool removes guesswork and reduces measurement errors that can be costly in professional settings.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Feet to Meters?

An imperial unit of length equal to exactly 12 inches = 0. To convert Feet to Meters, multiply by 0.3048. For example, 25 ft equals 7.62 m.

How many Meters are in 1 Foot?

There are 0.3048 Meters in 1 Foot.

How many Feet are in 1 Meter?

There are 3.28084 Feet in 1 Meter.

What is the formula for Foot to Meter conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 0.3048. This means 1 ft = 0.3048 m.

Is a Foot bigger than a Meter?

Yes. One Foot is larger than one Meter because 1 ft equals 0.3048 m, which is less than 1.

When do you need to convert between Feet and Meters?

The base SI unit of length (ISO 80000-3 §3-1), defined since the 1983 CGPM resolution as the distance light travels in vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second — making the speed of light an exact defined constant of ... Foot and Meter are both length units, so conversion comes up whenever one source of information uses one unit and another uses the other — a classic cross-reference challenge in engineering, trade, travel, and everyday life.

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