Square Feet to Acres

Convert square feet to acres instantly, with a full reference table.

Square Feet to Acres conversion table
Square Feet (ft²)Acres (ac)
5,0000.115
10,0000.23
15,0000.344
20,0000.459
25,0000.574
30,0000.689
35,0000.804
40,0000.918
45,0001.033
50,0001.148
Formula: One square foot equals 0.0000229568 acres. To convert square feet to acres, multiply by 0.0000229568, or divide by 43,560.

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About the Square Feet to Acres

Square Feet to Acres turns a building or parcel measurement in square feet into the same area expressed in acres. The conversion rests on a single fixed fact: one acre equals exactly 43,560 square feet. That number is not arbitrary. It comes from old English surveying, where an acre was a strip one furlong long (660 feet) by one chain wide (66 feet) -- the area a team of oxen could plough in a day. Multiply those two and you land on 43,560, which is why every U.S. land record still uses it today.

Reach for this converter whenever a figure is quoted in square feet but you need to think, compare, or report in acres. Real estate listings are the most common case: a parcel might be advertised as 21,780 square feet, but it reads more clearly as half an acre. The same need shows up in zoning checks, property tax assessments, agricultural and pasture planning, lot-split feasibility, and legal descriptions where deeds and plats may switch between the two units on the same document. Converting both to one unit lets you catch typos and compare lots fairly.

The math itself is one step: divide the square-foot figure by 43,560 to get acres. So 87,120 square feet divided by 43,560 gives exactly 2 acres, and a 10,890-square-foot lot works out to a quarter acre. Going the other direction, multiply acres by 43,560. The tool applies the exact factor rather than a rounded one, so results stay precise even for odd, surveyor-measured parcels. For a fast mental estimate, remember that roughly every 43,500 square feet is about one acre, and a common 8,712-square-foot suburban lot is about a fifth of an acre.

This is a pure arithmetic conversion, so accuracy depends only on the square-foot number you feed in -- the 43,560 factor is exact by definition in the U.S. survey system. Note that it applies to area, not the shape or boundaries of a parcel; an acre can be any outline, from a square to a long strip. The converter runs entirely in your browser, so the dimensions you enter are never uploaded or stored. For a binding legal acreage on a deed or survey, always rely on a licensed surveyor's recorded figure rather than a quick conversion.

Frequently asked questions

How many square feet are in one acre?

Exactly 43,560 square feet. This is a fixed, defined value in the U.S. customary survey system, not a rounded approximation.

What is the formula to convert square feet to acres?

Divide the number of square feet by 43,560. For example, 130,680 square feet divided by 43,560 equals 3 acres.

How many square feet is a half acre and a quarter acre?

A half acre is 21,780 square feet and a quarter acre is 10,890 square feet, since you simply take half or a quarter of 43,560.

Why is an acre 43,560 square feet instead of a round number?

The figure comes from historic surveying: an acre is one furlong (660 feet) by one chain (66 feet), and 660 multiplied by 66 equals 43,560.

Is this conversion accurate enough for a property deed?

The math is exact, but a deed or legal description should use the acreage from a licensed surveyor's recorded plat. Use this converter for estimates, comparisons, and quick checks.

From our blog

Gallons to Fluid Ounces: The 128 Rule and How to Use It in Real Life

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026

Volume in the kitchen, the workshop, and the gym keeps bouncing between two scales: the gallon, which we buy and store, and the fluid ounce, which we actually pour. The single number that links them in the US system is 128. One gallon is 128 fluid ounces, full stop, and once that fact is locked in, every conversion in this direction becomes one quick multiplication.

Where does 128 come from? A US gallon is legally defined as 231 cubic inches, and a fluid ounce is set at exactly one one-hundred-twenty-eighth of a gallon. That is why the number is not a tidy round figure like 100. It cascades neatly through the smaller units too: a gallon holds 4 quarts, each quart holds 32 fluid ounces, and 4 times 32 lands you right back at 128. Knowing those stepping stones makes mental estimates easy even without a tool.

The conversion earns its keep in scaling. A caterer producing a 3-gallon batch of lemonade knows there are 384 fluid ounces to portion, which divides cleanly into 32 servings of 12 ounces. A grower mixing a fertilizer concentrate at, say, 2 ounces per gallon can read the label and the jug in the same breath. And a person chasing a one-gallon daily water target can see that a 24-ounce bottle, refilled five times, leaves them just 8 ounces short.

The biggest pitfall is not the arithmetic but the system. The UK imperial gallon is bigger, holding 160 imperial fluid ounces, and the imperial fluid ounce is itself a slightly different size. Converting a US gallon using the imperial factor, or vice versa, throws your numbers off by roughly a fifth, enough to ruin a dilution ratio or a recipe. Always confirm which gallon a source intends before you trust a result.

For repeat conversions, lean on a tool rather than your memory. Typing the gallon figure and reading off the ounces removes rounding mistakes and the classic mix-up between fluid ounces and weight ounces. Because this converter runs in the browser with a fixed factor, the answer is instant, consistent, and private, which is exactly what you want when a measurement actually matters.

  • Memorize the chain 1 gal = 4 qt = 8 pt = 128 fl oz so you can sanity-check any converted result in your head.
  • For a fast estimate, round 128 to 130 and adjust down slightly; 5 gallons is about 640 fluid ounces.
  • Before converting, check whether your source uses US or UK gallons, since imperial uses 160 fluid ounces, not 128.
  • When following dilution labels written as ounces per gallon, convert the whole container to ounces first so you can dose the entire batch at once.

Read the full guide →

Tool by the Super Simple Digital Tools Team. Reviewed by our editorial team. Free to use, no signup required.

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