Acre to Square Foot Converter
Convert acres to square feet with our free online area converter.
Quick Answer
1 Acre = 43560 square feet
Formula: Acre × conversion factor = Square Foot
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
Our Accuracy Guarantee
All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.
Acre to Square Foot Calculator
How to Use the Acre to Square Foot Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Acre).
- The converted value in Square Foot will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Area category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Acre to Square Foot: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Acre to Square Foot involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Acre = 43560 square feetExample Calculation:
Convert 10 acres: 10 × 43560 = 435600 square feet
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
Need to convert to other area units?
View all Area conversions →What is a Acre and a Square Foot?
The Mathematical Definition
1 Acre = 43,560 square feet
This definition comes from the traditional measurement:
- 1 chain = 66 feet (Gunter's chain)
- 1 furlong = 660 feet (10 chains)
- 1 acre = 1 chain × 1 furlong = 66 ft × 660 ft = 43,560 sq ft
In Other Units:
- Square Yards: $\frac{43,560}{9} = 4,840 \text{ sq yd}$
- Square Meters: $43,560 \times 0.09290304 = 4,046.856 \text{ m}^2$
- Hectares: $\frac{4,046.856}{10,000} = 0.4047 \text{ ha}$
Shape Doesn't Matter
An acre can be any shape as long as the total area is 43,560 sq ft.
- Square Acre: 208.71 ft × 208.71 ft
- Rectangular Acre: 66 ft × 660 ft (traditional furlong × chain)
- Circular Acre: Radius of 117.75 ft
- Irregular Acre: Any polygon with 43,560 sq ft area
The "Chain" System
The acre is part of an elegant measurement system based on Gunter's chain:
- 1 link = 7.92 inches (0.66 ft)
- 1 chain = 100 links = 66 ft
- 1 furlong = 10 chains = 660 ft = 1/8 mile
- 1 mile = 8 furlongs = 80 chains = 5,280 ft
- 1 acre = 10 square chains
This system made surveying incredibly efficient. A surveyor could measure land using a physical chain and easily calculate acreage.
and Standards
The square foot is defined as the area of a square with sides measuring exactly one international foot:
1 ft² = (1 foot)² = (12 inches)² = (0.3048 meters)²
Precise Equivalents
- 1 ft² = 144 in² (exactly)
- 1 ft² = 1/9 yd² = 0.1111... yd² (exactly)
- 1 ft² = 0.09290304 m² (exactly, by 1959 definition)
- 1 ft² = 929.0304 cm² (exactly)
- 1 ft² = 92,903.04 mm² (exactly)
- 1 acre = 43,560 ft² (exactly)
- 1 square mile = 27,878,400 ft² (exactly)
International Foot Standard (1959)
The International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959 defined the international foot as precisely 0.3048 meters, resolving slight differences between the US survey foot and the British imperial foot. This definition makes:
1 square foot = (0.3048 m)² = 0.09290304 m² (exactly)
Before 1959, small variations existed. The US survey foot (still used in some land surveys) is defined as exactly 1200/3937 meters, making the US survey square foot = 0.09290341... m² (about 0.0004% larger—negligible for most purposes).
Symbol Variations
The square foot is represented by multiple symbols:
- ft² (most common, scientific)
- sq ft or sq. ft. (common in real estate)
- SF (architectural drawings, construction documents)
- □′ (rare, using the foot prime symbol)
All represent the same unit.
Note: The Acre is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Square Foot belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Acre and Square Foot
: From Oxen to GPS
Ancient Origins
The concept of measuring land by how much could be worked in a day is ancient and universal:
- Roman Jugerum: The area two oxen could plow in one day (~2/3 acre).
- German Morgen: "Morning's work" of plowing (~0.6-0.9 acres).
- French Arpent: Regional French unit (~0.85 acres).
- English Acre: The amount one man with one ox could plow in one day.
The problem? Soil quality varied. Rocky, hilly land took longer to plow than flat, fertile land. This led to regional variations in the "acre."
Medieval Chaos
In medieval England, there were dozens of different "acres":
- Statute Acre: 43,560 sq ft (the modern standard).
- Irish Acre: 7,840 sq yd (1.62 statute acres).
- Scottish Acre: 6,150 sq yd (1.27 statute acres).
- Cheshire Acre: 10,240 sq yd (2.11 statute acres).
- Cornish Acre: Varied by location.
Land disputes were common because nobody could agree on the size of an acre!
The Gunter Revolution (1620)
Edmund Gunter, an English clergyman and mathematician, invented the surveyor's chain in 1620. This 66-foot chain (divided into 100 links) became the standard tool for land measurement.
Why 66 feet?
- 1 chain = 4 rods (or poles) = 66 feet.
- 10 chains = 1 furlong = 660 feet = 1/8 mile.
- 80 chains = 1 mile = 5,280 feet.
This made calculations trivial:
- 1 acre = 10 square chains.
- 640 acres = 1 square mile.
The Homestead Act (1862)
In the United States, the Homestead Act of 1862 granted 160 acres of public land to settlers who would farm it for 5 years. This "quarter section" (1/4 of a square mile) became the iconic American farm size.
The Grid System:
- 1 section = 1 square mile = 640 acres.
- 1 quarter section = 160 acres (homestead).
- 1 township = 36 sections = 23,040 acres = 36 square miles.
This grid system is why much of the American Midwest has perfectly straight roads running north-south and east-west.
Modern Standardization
- 1878: Weights and Measures Act (UK) formalized the "statutory acre."
- 1959: International yard and pound agreement standardized the acre globally.
- Today: The acre is legally defined as exactly 4,046.8564224 square meters.
and Evolution
Ancient Origins: The Human Foot (3000 BCE - 1200 CE)
The foot as a length measurement dates to ancient civilizations, where it approximated the length of a human foot:
- Egyptian royal cubit: ~0.525 m, subdivided into "feet" of ~0.30 m
- Greek pous: ~0.296 m (varied by city-state)
- Roman pes: ~0.2967 m (29.67 cm)
- Medieval European feet: Varied from 0.25-0.34 m depending on region
These variations meant "square feet" were inconsistent across regions and time periods. A Roman square foot was about 88 cm² versus a medieval German square foot of up to 100 cm².
English Standardization: From Barleycorns to Royal Feet (1300-1824)
Medieval England attempted standardization through royal decrees:
- Edward I (1305): Defined the inch as "three grains of barley, dry and round, laid end to end," making a foot = 36 barleycorns
- Edward II (1324): Further refined the foot based on the royal standard at Westminster
- Weights and Measures Acts (1700s-1824): Gradually standardized the imperial foot across Britain
The Weights and Measures Act of 1824 officially defined the imperial foot and established consistency across the British Empire. This foot became the basis for square footage in British architecture, land surveying, and real estate.
American Adoption: Colonial Legacy (1600s-1959)
American colonists brought English measurement systems to the New World. After independence, the United States retained imperial units rather than adopting the metric system (despite Thomas Jefferson's advocacy for decimalization).
The US customary foot slightly diverged from the British imperial foot over time due to independent maintenance of measurement standards. By the mid-20th century, the difference was approximately 2 parts per million—tiny, but problematic for precision surveying.
The 1959 International Agreement: Ending the Confusion
The International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959, signed by the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, established:
1 international yard = 0.9144 meters (exactly)
1 international foot = 0.3048 meters (exactly)
1 international square foot = 0.09290304 m² (exactly)
This unified the foot globally and aligned imperial units with the metric system through exact conversion factors.
Exception: The US survey foot (1200/3937 meters) remains in use for some land surveys to maintain consistency with historical surveys. This creates a US survey square foot slightly different from the international square foot—a distinction only relevant in precision surveying.
Persistence Despite Metrication (1960s-Present)
Throughout the 20th century, most countries adopted the metric system. However, square feet remain dominant in:
United States: Exclusively uses square feet for residential real estate. All home listings, construction documents, building codes, and HVAC calculations use ft². Metrication efforts failed in the 1970s.
United Kingdom: Officially metricated in 1995, requiring metric units in commerce. However, real estate continues to list properties in both square feet and square meters, with square feet often prominently displayed due to consumer preference and historical familiarity.
Canada: Officially metricated (square meters), but square footage remains common in real estate listings and construction, particularly in regions near the US border.
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh: Use square feet as the primary unit for real estate despite official metrication. Property advertisements overwhelmingly use sq ft.
Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia: Mixed systems. Hong Kong historically used square feet but increasingly shows square meters. Singapore mandates square meters but square feet remain understood.
The Real Estate Lock-In Effect
Square footage persists in real estate due to:
- Consumer familiarity: Buyers understand "2,000 sq ft" intuitively from years of exposure
- Historical data: Decades of comparable sales in square feet make valuation easier
- Industry resistance: Realtors, appraisers, and builders resist change due to retraining costs
- Building codes: US building codes specify minimum room sizes in square feet
- Property taxation: Tax assessments based on square footage in many jurisdictions
Common Uses and Applications: acres vs square feet
Explore the typical applications for both Acre (imperial/US) and Square Foot (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for acres
1. Real Estate
The acre is the standard unit for land sales in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia.
Residential:
- Lot sizes for homes, especially in suburban and rural areas.
- Zoning regulations often specify minimum lot sizes in acres (e.g., "R-1 zoning: 1-acre minimum").
Commercial:
- Shopping centers, office parks, industrial sites.
- "10-acre commercial development site available."
Undeveloped Land:
- Timberland, hunting land, investment property.
- "40-acre wooded parcel with creek frontage."
2. Agriculture
Farmers use acres to:
- Measure field sizes: "I have 80 acres in corn this year."
- Calculate yields: "We harvested 180 bushels per acre."
- Apply inputs: "Apply 150 lbs of nitrogen per acre."
- Comply with regulations: "You must leave 10 acres fallow for conservation."
Crop Yields (US Average):
- Corn: 177 bushels/acre.
- Soybeans: 52 bushels/acre.
- Wheat: 47 bushels/acre.
- Cotton: 900 lbs/acre.
3. Forestry
Timber is sold by the acre.
- Managed Forest: "200 acres of pine plantation."
- Timber Yield: "This stand will produce 20 cords per acre."
4. Land Management & Conservation
- National Parks: Measured in acres (Yellowstone: 2.2 million acres).
- Wetlands: "Restore 500 acres of wetlands."
- Wildlife Habitat: "Preserve 1,000 acres for endangered species."
5. Sports & Recreation
- Golf Courses: 100-200 acres (18 holes).
- Ski Resorts: "1,500 acres of skiable terrain."
- Hunting Leases: "Lease 500 acres for deer hunting."
When to Use square feet
1. Real Estate Listings and Sales
Square footage is the primary metric for home valuation in the US, Canada, and UK. Property listings always specify total square footage, often breaking down:
- Total living area (heated/cooled space)
- Bedroom sizes (sq ft per room)
- Basement area (finished vs. unfinished)
- Garage (often listed separately)
Price per square foot is the key metric for comparable sales analysis:
- National US average (2025): $150-200/sq ft for new construction
- Urban markets (San Francisco, NYC): $400-1,000+/sq ft
- Suburban markets: $100-250/sq ft
- Rural markets: $80-150/sq ft
Example: A 2,000 sq ft home listed at $400,000 = $200/sq ft
2. Construction and Architecture
Blueprints, floor plans, and construction documents use square feet for:
- Floor area calculations (required for building permits)
- Material estimates (flooring, drywall, roofing in sq ft)
- Cost estimating (construction cost per sq ft)
- Zoning compliance (maximum floor area ratio, minimum room sizes)
Construction costs (2025 US averages):
- Budget home: $100-150/sq ft
- Standard home: $150-250/sq ft
- Custom home: $250-400/sq ft
- Luxury home: $400-800+/sq ft
3. Flooring and Home Improvement
Flooring materials (carpet, tile, hardwood, laminate) are purchased by the square foot. Homeowners measure room dimensions to calculate total square footage needed, adding 10-15% for waste.
Calculation example:
- Living room: 15' × 18' = 270 sq ft
- Add 10% waste: 270 × 1.10 = 297 sq ft
- Order 300 sq ft of flooring
Paint coverage: One gallon covers ~350-400 sq ft per coat (varies by surface texture). Calculate wall square footage: (Perimeter × Height) - (window/door areas).
4. HVAC System Design
Heating and cooling systems are sized in BTUs or tons, calculated based on square footage of conditioned space. HVAC contractors use Manual J load calculations that account for:
- Square footage (primary factor)
- Insulation levels (R-values)
- Window area and efficiency
- Climate zone
- Air infiltration rates
Rule of thumb: Oversimplified (1 ton/400 sq ft), but professional calculations adjust for specifics.
5. Property Taxation and Assessment
Many jurisdictions calculate property taxes partially based on square footage. Assessors measure "finished living area" to determine assessed value.
Example: A county might assess homes at $150/sq ft, so a 2,500 sq ft home has an assessed value of $375,000, with property tax = assessed value × tax rate (e.g., $375,000 × 1.2% = $4,500/year).
6. Interior Design and Space Planning
Interior designers use square footage to:
- Determine appropriate furniture sizes for rooms
- Calculate occupancy limits (building codes specify sq ft per person)
- Specify area rug sizes
- Plan layouts and circulation space
Furniture scale guidelines:
- Small bedroom (100 sq ft): Twin/full bed, nightstand, small dresser
- Medium bedroom (150 sq ft): Queen bed, two nightstands, dresser, chair
- Large bedroom (250 sq ft): King bed, full furniture set, seating area
Additional Unit Information
About Acre (acre)
How big is an acre visually?
The easiest way to visualize an acre:
- Football Field: An acre is about 90.75% of an American football field (including end zones). The field is 120 yards × 53.33 yards = 57,600 sq ft. An acre is 43,560 sq ft.
- Square: A square acre is 208.71 feet on each side. That's about 70 yards × 70 yards.
- Walking: You can walk the perimeter of a square acre in about 3-4 minutes at a normal pace.
How many houses fit on an acre?
Depends on lot size and zoning:
- Urban (Small Lots): 8-12 houses (4,000-5,000 sq ft lots).
- Suburban (Standard): 4-6 houses (7,000-10,000 sq ft lots).
- Suburban (Large): 2-3 houses (15,000-20,000 sq ft lots).
- Rural (Estate): 1 house (entire acre or more).
Zoning Example:
- R-1 (Low Density): 1-2 units per acre.
- R-2 (Medium Density): 4-8 units per acre.
- R-3 (High Density): 12-20 units per acre.
How many acres is a football field?
American Football Field:
- With end zones: 120 yards × 53.33 yards = 57,600 sq ft = 1.32 acres.
- Without end zones: 100 yards × 53.33 yards = 48,000 sq ft = 1.10 acres.
Soccer Field (FIFA):
- Regulation: 100-130 yards × 50-100 yards.
- Typical: 110 yards × 70 yards = 56,700 sq ft = 1.30 acres.
How many acres is a city block?
Varies wildly by city:
- Manhattan (NYC): 2-5 acres (blocks are irregular).
- Chicago: ~3 acres (660 ft × 330 ft blocks).
- Portland: ~2 acres (200 ft × 200 ft blocks).
- Phoenix: ~4 acres (larger grid).
Rule of Thumb: Most US city blocks are 2-5 acres.
How many acres do I need for a house?
Minimum (Legal):
- Urban: 0.1 acres (4,356 sq ft) - typical city lot.
- Suburban: 0.25-0.5 acres - standard suburban lot.
- Rural: 1+ acres - zoning often requires minimum acreage.
Practical:
- Comfortable Home: 0.5-1 acre (room for yard, garden, privacy).
- Hobby Farm: 5-10 acres (horses, chickens, large garden).
- Self-Sufficiency: 10-20 acres (livestock, crops, timber).
How many acres do you need for farming?
Depends on the type of farming:
- Market Garden (Vegetables): 1-5 acres (intensive).
- Orchard: 5-20 acres.
- Cattle (Pasture): 1.5-2 acres per cow (varies by climate/grass quality).
- Grain Farming: 100-1,000+ acres (mechanized).
- Dairy Farm: 50-500 acres (depends on herd size).
USDA Definition of a Farm: Any place that produced and sold at least $1,000 of agricultural products during the year. This can be as small as 1 acre of intensive vegetables or as large as 10,000 acres of wheat.
How do you calculate acreage from dimensions?
For Rectangular Land: $$ \text{Acres} = \frac{\text{Length (ft)} \times \text{Width (ft)}}{43,560} $$
Example: A lot is 200 ft × 300 ft. $$ \frac{200 \times 300}{43,560} = \frac{60,000}{43,560} = 1.38 \text{ acres} $$
For Irregular Shapes:
- Divide the land into triangles or rectangles.
- Calculate the area of each section.
- Add them together.
- Divide by 43,560.
Modern Method: Use GPS or GIS software to trace the boundary and calculate area automatically.
Is an acre the same in all countries?
Mostly yes, but with variations:
- US/UK Acre (Statute Acre): 43,560 sq ft (standard).
- Irish Acre: 7,840 sq yd = 70,560 sq ft = 1.62 statute acres (historical, rarely used today).
- Scottish Acre: 6,150 sq yd = 55,350 sq ft = 1.27 statute acres (historical).
- Acre (International): Since 1959, the "international acre" is standardized at 4,046.8564224 m².
Today: When someone says "acre" without qualification, they mean the statute acre (43,560 sq ft).
Why is an acre 43,560 square feet?
It comes from the furlong × chain definition:
- 1 furlong = 660 feet (1/8 mile, the length of a traditional plowed furrow).
- 1 chain = 66 feet (Gunter's surveying chain).
- 1 acre = 1 furlong × 1 chain = 660 ft × 66 ft = 43,560 sq ft.
This was chosen because it made surveying easy with Gunter's chain (which was exactly 1 chain long).
How many acres is Central Park?
Central Park (New York City): 843 acres (1.317 square miles).
- Length: 2.5 miles (north-south).
- Width: 0.5 miles (east-west).
- Perimeter: ~6 miles.
For comparison:
- Golden Gate Park (San Francisco): 1,017 acres (20% larger than Central Park).
- Hyde Park (London): 350 acres.
About Square Foot (ft²)
How big is one square foot visually?
One square foot is a square measuring 12 inches (1 foot) on each side.
Common objects:
- Standard 12"×12" floor tile: Exactly 1 square foot
- Large pizza (14" diameter): About 1.07 sq ft (π×7²/144)
- Sheet of paper (8.5"×11"): 0.65 sq ft (93.5 in² ÷ 144)
- Laptop computer (typical 15"): ~0.7-0.9 sq ft
Hand estimation: A handspan (thumb to pinky) stretched out is roughly 9-10 inches, so imagine a square slightly larger than your handspan on each side.
How many square inches are in a square foot?
Exactly 144 square inches (in²) in one square foot.
Calculation: 1 foot = 12 inches, so 1 ft² = 12" × 12" = 144 in²
Examples:
- 1 ft² = 144 in²
- 2 ft² = 288 in²
- 0.5 ft² = 72 in²
- 10 ft² = 1,440 in²
Use case: Small materials (glass panes, small tiles) sold in square inches can be converted to square feet for larger projects.
How many square feet are in a square yard?
Exactly 9 square feet in one square yard.
Calculation: 1 yard = 3 feet, so 1 yd² = 3' × 3' = 9 ft²
Examples:
- 1 yd² = 9 ft²
- 10 yd² = 90 ft²
- 30 yd² = 270 ft²
- 100 yd² = 900 ft²
Carpet pricing: Carpet is often priced per square yard. To find total cost, divide room sq ft by 9 to get sq yd, then multiply by price per sq yd.
Example: 270 sq ft room ÷ 9 = 30 sq yd. At $25/sq yd, cost = $750.
How do I convert square feet to square meters?
Exact formula: m² = ft² × 0.09290304
Quick approximation: m² ≈ ft² ÷ 10.764 (or ft² ÷ 11 for rough estimates)
Examples:
- 100 ft² = 9.29 m²
- 500 ft² = 46.45 m²
- 1,000 ft² = 92.90 m²
- 2,000 ft² = 185.81 m²
- 3,500 ft² = 325.16 m²
Reverse (m² to ft²): ft² = m² × 10.7639
Memory aid: "Divide square feet by roughly 11 to get square meters" (slightly overestimates, but close)
How many square feet are in an acre?
Exactly 43,560 square feet in one acre.
Calculation: 1 acre = 1 furlong × 1 chain = 660' × 66' = 43,560 ft²
Common fractions:
- 1/4 acre = 10,890 ft²
- 1/2 acre = 21,780 ft²
- 3/4 acre = 32,670 ft²
- 1 acre = 43,560 ft²
Visualization: An acre is roughly 208.7' × 208.7' (a square), or 43,560 sq ft in any shape.
Typical lot: A 0.25-acre suburban lot (~11,000 sq ft) might be 100' × 110' or 90' × 122'.
What is the average size of a home in the US?
2025 statistics:
- Median new single-family home: 2,261 sq ft (210 m²)
- Average new single-family home: 2,480 sq ft (230 m²)
- Existing homes (median): ~2,000 sq ft (186 m²)
Historical trend:
- 1973: 1,660 sq ft median
- 1990: 1,905 sq ft median
- 2007 (peak): 2,521 sq ft median
- 2009 (recession low): 2,135 sq ft median
- 2025: 2,261 sq ft median
Regional variation:
- Western US: Larger (2,400-2,600 sq ft avg)
- Southern US: Larger (2,300-2,500 sq ft avg)
- Northeastern US: Smaller (1,800-2,200 sq ft avg)
- Urban areas: Significantly smaller (1,200-1,800 sq ft avg)
How much does flooring cost per square foot?
Flooring costs vary widely by material and installation complexity:
Materials only (2025 US averages):
- Carpet: $1-5/sq ft
- Laminate: $2-5/sq ft
- Vinyl plank (LVP): $2-7/sq ft
- Engineered hardwood: $3-10/sq ft
- Solid hardwood: $5-15/sq ft
- Tile (ceramic): $1-10/sq ft
- Tile (porcelain): $3-15/sq ft
- Natural stone: $5-30/sq ft
Installed (material + labor):
- Carpet: $3-8/sq ft
- Laminate: $5-10/sq ft
- LVP: $6-12/sq ft
- Engineered hardwood: $8-18/sq ft
- Solid hardwood: $12-25/sq ft
- Tile: $10-30/sq ft
Total cost example: 1,000 sq ft of mid-grade engineered hardwood at $12/sq ft installed = $12,000
How do I calculate the square footage of my home?
For a rectangular home:
- Measure length and width of each room in feet
- Multiply length × width for each room (= sq ft)
- Sum all rooms
Example:
- Living room: 15' × 18' = 270 sq ft
- Kitchen: 12' × 14' = 168 sq ft
- Bedroom 1: 12' × 12' = 144 sq ft
- Bedroom 2: 10' × 11' = 110 sq ft
- Bathroom: 8' × 9' = 72 sq ft
- Total: 764 sq ft
For irregular spaces:
- Divide into rectangles, measure each, sum areas
- Or use a laser measure/measuring wheel
- Or use smartphone apps (RoomScan, MagicPlan) that use AR
What to include:
- Include: Heated/cooled living space, closets, hallways
- Exclude: Garage (listed separately), unfinished basement, attics, open porches
- Gray area: Finished basements often listed separately as "finished basement sq ft"
Professional measurement: Appraisers follow ANSI standards (Z765-2021) for consistent measurement.
Is the square foot an SI unit?
No, the square foot is not part of the International System of Units (SI). It belongs to imperial and US customary systems.
The SI unit for area is the square meter (m²).
However, square feet remain legally accepted for commerce in the US and are widely used alongside square meters in the UK, Canada, India, and many Commonwealth nations despite official metrication.
International context: When publishing for international audiences or scientific work, convert square feet to square meters (×0.0929).
Why are homes measured in square feet instead of square meters in the US?
Historical inertia: The US never fully metricated. Square footage has been standard in US real estate and construction for over a century.
Consumer familiarity: Americans intuitively understand home sizes in square feet. "2,000 square feet" is meaningful; "185 square meters" requires mental conversion.
Industry entrenchment: Building codes, zoning laws, construction standards, and appraisal methods all use square feet. Switching would require massive regulatory updates and retraining.
Resistance to change: Attempts to metricate the US in the 1970s (Metric Conversion Act of 1975) failed due to public and industry opposition.
Network effects: Since all comparable sales data is in square feet, realtors and buyers rely on it for valuation. Switching unilaterally would confuse comparisons.
Result: Square feet remain universal in US real estate, construction, and home improvement despite metric adoption in science, medicine, and manufacturing.
How many square feet do I need per person in a home?
Rough guidelines (varies by lifestyle, culture, family composition):
Minimum livable:
- 200-300 sq ft per person: Tight but functional (studio/small apartment)
- 400-600 sq ft per person: Comfortable (typical family home)
- 800-1,000+ sq ft per person: Spacious (luxury homes)
Examples:
- Single person: 400-800 sq ft (studio to 1-bedroom)
- Couple: 800-1,200 sq ft (1-2 bedrooms)
- Family of 3: 1,200-1,800 sq ft (2-3 bedrooms)
- Family of 4: 1,600-2,500 sq ft (3-4 bedrooms)
- Family of 5+: 2,000-3,500+ sq ft (4-5 bedrooms)
International comparison:
- US average: ~600-700 sq ft per person (2025)
- UK average: ~350-400 sq ft per person
- European Union: ~400-500 sq ft per person
- Japan: ~300-350 sq ft per person
- Hong Kong: ~150-200 sq ft per person (very dense)
Conversion Table: Acre to Square Foot
| Acre (acre) | Square Foot (ft²) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 21,780 |
| 1 | 43,560 |
| 1.5 | 65,340 |
| 2 | 87,120 |
| 5 | 217,800 |
| 10 | 435,600 |
| 25 | 1,089,000 |
| 50 | 2,178,000 |
| 100 | 4,356,000 |
| 250 | 10,890,000 |
| 500 | 21,780,000 |
| 1,000 | 43,560,000 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Acre to Square Foot?
To convert Acre to Square Foot, enter the value in Acre in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our area converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Acre to Square Foot?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Acre and Square Foot. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Square Foot back to Acre?
Yes! You can easily convert Square Foot back to Acre by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Square Foot to Acre converter page. You can also explore other area conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Acre and Square Foot?
Acre and Square Foot are both standard units used in area measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our area converter for more conversion options.
For more area conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
Helpful Conversion Guides
Learn more about unit conversion with our comprehensive guides:
All Area Conversions
Other Area Units and Conversions
Explore other area units and their conversion options:
- Square Meter (m²) • Acre to Square Meter
- Square Kilometer (km²) • Acre to Square Kilometer
- Square Centimeter (cm²) • Acre to Square Centimeter
- Square Millimeter (mm²) • Acre to Square Millimeter
- Square Inch (in²) • Acre to Square Inch
- Square Yard (yd²) • Acre to Square Yard
- Square Mile (mi²) • Acre to Square Mile
- Hectare (ha) • Acre to Hectare
Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
National Institute of Standards and Technology — Standards for area measurements
Last verified: December 3, 2025