Feet to Meters: The One Exact Number That Makes the Conversion Foolproof

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters

Most measurement conversions involve a factor that has been rounded somewhere along the way, but feet to meters is unusually clean. Since 1959, when major English-speaking countries agreed to define the inch as exactly 2.54 centimeters, one foot has been defined as exactly 0.3048 meters. That single number is all you need: every feet-to-meters answer is just your value multiplied by 0.3048. Knowing the factor is exact also tells you something useful: any imprecision in your result comes only from how many decimal places you choose to keep, not from the conversion itself.

Picture a practical example. You are reading a US floor plan that lists a room as 14 feet by 11 feet, but your furniture supplier quotes everything in meters. Multiply each dimension by 0.3048 and the room becomes 4.2672 m by 3.3528 m, or roughly 4.27 m by 3.35 m for planning purposes. The same routine works for ceiling heights, door widths, and garden lengths. Once you trust the factor, you can convert an entire set of plans without second-guessing whether a chart you found online used the correct constant.

Heights deserve their own note because they are the most common reason people convert feet to meters, and they almost always include inches. The trick is to express the inches as part of a foot before converting. Inches divided by 12 gives the fractional foot: 3 inches is 0.25 ft, 6 inches is 0.5 ft, 9 inches is 0.75 ft. Add that to the whole feet, then multiply by 0.3048. A height of 5 ft 11 in becomes 5.9167 ft, which converts to about 1.80 m. Doing the inches step first is what keeps height conversions from drifting off by several centimeters.

Choosing how many decimals to show is a judgment call based on the job. For a passport or a casual statement of height, two decimal places (1.83 m) is plenty and easy to read. For carpentry, cabinetry, or anything you are going to cut, keep at least three or four places, because rounding 0.3048 down to 0.30 introduces an error of more than one centimeter per meter, which compounds across a large structure. The browser-based tool keeps the full precision internally, so you can round the displayed figure to whatever your task actually requires.

One subtlety surfaces only in specialized work: the United States historically kept a US survey foot for geodetic and land-survey records, and it differs from the international foot by about two parts per million. For ordinary construction, retail, fitness, and travel, that difference is irrelevant and the international foot of 0.3048 m is the right standard. If you are working with legacy survey coordinates or official cadastral data, check which definition your source used before converting, since at large distances the tiny gap can add up to a noticeable offset.

Quick tips

  • Memorize the exact factor 0.3048 m per foot; multiplying by it is the entire conversion, and the inverse (divide by 0.3048) gives you meters back to feet.
  • For feet-and-inches heights, convert the inches to a decimal foot first by dividing by 12, then add and multiply, so you do not lose centimeters.
  • Keep three or four decimal places for anything you will cut or build, since rounding 0.3048 to 0.30 adds over a centimeter of error per meter.
  • If your data comes from old US land surveys, confirm whether it uses the US survey foot before trusting an international-foot conversion.

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