Newton-Meters to Foot-Pounds: A Practical Guide for Setting Torque Correctly
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters
If you have ever opened a repair manual and found a bolt spec written as "25 Nm" while your torque wrench only counts in foot-pounds, you have hit one of the most common unit clashes in the garage. Newton-meters are the international (SI) unit for torque, used across European and Asian manufacturers, while foot-pounds remain the everyday unit on many American tools. Neither is more correct than the other; they simply describe the same twisting force on different scales, and converting between them is a quick fixed calculation.
The conversion rests on one constant: 1 Nm equals approximately 0.737562 ft-lb. To go from newton-meters to foot-pounds you multiply; to go the other direction you multiply foot-pounds by about 1.355818, or divide your newton-meters by the same number. A handy mental check is that a foot-pound is the larger unit, so the foot-pound figure is always smaller than the newton-meter figure, by roughly a quarter. If a quick estimate ever comes out bigger in ft-lb than in Nm, you have multiplied the wrong way.
Where this matters most is anywhere a fastener has a real consequence if it is too tight or too loose. Wheel lug nuts, cylinder-head bolts, spark plugs, suspension arms, and bicycle components all carry published torque values for a reason: the clamping force keeps parts located and sealed without overstretching the threads. A spec given as 108 Nm for lug nuts becomes about 80 ft-lb, and dialing in that converted value lets you trust the join instead of relying on feel.
It is worth understanding the foot-pound versus pound-foot debate so it does not throw you off. You will see both ft-lb and lb-ft printed on tools and in articles. Many engineers argue torque should be written lb-ft and energy ft-lb, because torque and work share the same base units yet are different physical ideas. For practical conversion, though, the number you calculate is the same regardless of which way the two words are ordered, so set your wrench to the figure and move on.
To use the converter, type the newton-meter value from your manual and read off the foot-pound equivalent, then set that number on your wrench, working up to it smoothly rather than jerking the handle. For multi-bolt jobs like a head or a wheel, follow the manufacturer's tightening sequence and any staged steps (for example, a first pass at a lower torque, then a final pass) using the converted figure at each stage. Because the calculation runs in your browser, you can keep the page open on your phone at the workbench without any data leaving your device.
Quick tips
- Remember the quick sanity check: foot-pounds are always smaller than newton-meters, by roughly a quarter, so 40 Nm is near 30 ft-lb, not 50.
- When a job lists staged torque (for example a first and final pass), convert each stage separately and set the wrench for each step.
- Treat ft-lb and lb-ft as the same number when dialing in a wrench; the word order does not change the value you set.
- For very small fasteners specified in tenths of a newton-meter, switch to inch-pounds if you have it, since 1 ft-lb equals 12 inch-pounds and gives finer control.
The Newton-Meters to Foot-Pounds is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.