Centimeter to Meter Converter

Convert centimeters to meters with our free online length converter.

Quick Answer

1 Centimeter = 0.01 meters

Formula: Centimeter × conversion factor = Meter

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.

Last verified: December 2025Reviewed by: Sam Mathew, Software Engineer

Centimeter to Meter Calculator

How to Use the Centimeter to Meter Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Centimeter).
  2. The converted value in Meter will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
  3. Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Length category.
  4. Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
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How to Convert Centimeter to Meter: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Centimeter to Meter involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

1 Centimeter = 0.01 meters

Example Calculation:

Convert 10 centimeters: 10 × 0.01 = 0.1 meters

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.

What is a Centimeter and a Meter?

The centimeter (symbol: cm) is a unit of length equal to exactly one-hundredth of a meter (1/100 m or 0.01 m). It's also equal to exactly 10 millimeters.

The centimeter is part of the International System of Units (SI) and uses the metric prefix "centi-" meaning one-hundredth (from Latin centum, "hundred").

Mathematical Relationships

1 centimeter equals:

  • 10 millimeters (mm)
  • 0.01 meters (m)
  • 0.00001 kilometers (km)
  • 0.393701 inches (in)
  • 0.0328084 feet (ft)

Key conversion:

  • 1 inch = 2.54 cm exactly (this is the official international definition established in 1959)

Why Centimeters?

While the meter is the official SI base unit for length, centimeters are more practical for everyday measurements:

Too small for meters, too large for millimeters: A person who is 1.75 meters tall is more commonly described as 175 centimeters in metric countries. Writing "1.75 m" requires decimals; "175 cm" uses whole numbers.

Human-scale convenience: Most objects people interact with daily—clothing, screens, body measurements, food items—fall naturally into the 1-100 cm range.

Avoids decimal confusion: "15.2 cm" is clearer than "0.152 m" for most people.

The meter (US spelling) or metre (International spelling) (symbol: m) is the base unit of length in the International System of Units (SI). It is one of the seven SI base units and forms the foundation for measuring distance in the metric system.

Modern Definition (1983): The meter is defined as the distance traveled by light in a vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second. This definition links the meter to the speed of light, a fundamental constant of nature (c = 299,792,458 meters per second).

Key relationships:

  • 1 meter = 100 centimeters (cm)
  • 1 meter = 1,000 millimeters (mm)
  • 1 meter = 0.001 kilometers (km)
  • 1,000 meters = 1 kilometer

In terms of imperial/US customary units:

Visual perspective (how long is it?):

  • 1 meter ≈ Length of a guitar
  • 1 meter ≈ Distance from nose to fingertips (arm outstretched)
  • 1 meter ≈ One adult step/stride
  • 1 meter ≈ Width of a single bed
  • 2 meters ≈ Standard doorway height
  • 5 meters ≈ Length of a small car

It is the fundamental unit upon which all other SI length units are based through decimal multiplication or division.

Convert between length units: meter converter

Note: The Centimeter is part of the metric (SI) system, primarily used globally in science and trade. The Meter belongs to the metric (SI) system.

History of the Centimeter and Meter

French Revolution and the Birth of the Metric System

1790s: Revolutionary Innovation: The centimeter was born from the French Revolution's ambition to create a rational, universal measurement system based on nature and decimal mathematics.

The Meter Foundation: In 1791, the French Academy of Sciences defined the meter as one ten-millionth (1/10,000,000) of the distance from the equator to the North Pole along the meridian passing through Paris. The centimeter automatically followed as 1/100 of this meter.

Latin Roots: The prefix "centi-" derives from the Latin centum (hundred), making "centimeter" literally "hundredth of a meter."

1795 Official Adoption: France officially adopted the metric system on April 7, 1795, including the centimeter as a standard subdivision of the meter.

CGS System: The Centimeter's Scientific Era

1874: The Centimeter-Gram-Second System: British scientists James Clerk Maxwell and William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) promoted the CGS system, which used:

  • Centimeter for length (instead of meter)
  • Gram for mass (instead of kilogram)
  • Second for time

Scientific Dominance: The CGS system became the preferred standard for physics and chemistry throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Many scientific formulas and units were developed using centimeters.

Legacy Units: Several units still reflect the CGS heritage:

  • Poise (viscosity): measured in gram/(centimeter·second)
  • Erg (energy): gram·centimeter²/second²
  • Gauss (magnetic field): CGS unit for magnetic flux density

Transition to SI and the Modern Era

1960: The SI System: The International System of Units (SI) was officially established, promoting the meter-kilogram-second (MKS) system instead of CGS.

Centimeter's Continued Relevance: Despite the official SI preference for meters, centimeters remained dominant for everyday measurements because:

  • They're more practical for human-scale objects
  • They avoid decimals for most common measurements
  • They're familiar and intuitive

Global Adoption: Today, 195 of 198 countries use the metric system, with centimeters as the standard for body height, clothing, and everyday measurements. Only the United States, Myanmar, and Liberia officially use non-metric systems.

  • Pre-Revolutionary France (Pre-1790s): France used hundreds of different local length units, creating confusion in trade and science. The need for a universal, standardized system became critical.

  • Birth of the Meter (1791-1793): During the French Revolution, the French Academy of Sciences proposed a new unit of length based on natural constants. They defined the meter as one ten-millionth (1/10,000,000) of the distance from the Earth's equator to the North Pole along the meridian passing through Paris.

  • Meridian Survey (1792-1799): Astronomers Pierre Méchain and Jean-Baptiste Delambre conducted a seven-year expedition to measure the meridian arc from Dunkirk to Barcelona to determine the exact length of the meter. This ambitious survey became legendary in scientific history.

  • Platinum Meter Bar (1799): Based on the meridian measurements, the first physical standard was created: a platinum bar stored in the French National Archives. This became the legal meter in France.

  • Treaty of the Metre (1875): Seventeen nations signed this international treaty, establishing the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) and the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) to maintain global measurement standards.

  • International Prototype Meter (1889): A more precise platinum-iridium bar was created and designated as the international standard. This prototype was kept at the BIPM near Paris under controlled conditions (specific temperature, pressure, support points).

  • Krypton-86 Definition (1960): To improve accuracy and reproducibility, the meter was redefined as 1,650,763.73 wavelengths of the orange-red light emitted by krypton-86 atoms in a vacuum. This was the first definition based on atomic physics rather than a physical object.

  • Speed of Light Definition (1983): The current definition was adopted, fixing the speed of light at exactly 299,792,458 m/s and defining the meter based on this constant. This provided the most stable and reproducible definition possible, as the speed of light is a fundamental constant of nature.

  • Global Adoption: Today, the meter is used by virtually every country in the world. Only Liberia, Myanmar, and the United States have not fully adopted the metric system for everyday use, though even the US uses it extensively in science, medicine, and manufacturing.

  • Why It Matters: The meter's evolution from a physical bar to a definition based on universal constants represents humanity's quest for increasingly precise and universally accessible measurement standards.

Common Uses and Applications: centimeters vs meters

Explore the typical applications for both Centimeter (metric) and Meter (metric) to understand their common contexts.

Common Uses for centimeters

Medical and Healthcare

Growth Charts: Children's height is tracked in centimeters from birth:

  • Pediatricians plot growth on percentile charts
  • Birth length recorded in cm (typically 45-55 cm)
  • Annual height measurements track development

Medical Measurements:

  • Wound size: "3 cm laceration"
  • Tumor diameter: measured in cm for staging
  • Organ size: "enlarged liver extending 4 cm below rib cage"
  • Dilation during childbirth: measured in cm (0-10 cm)

Medical Equipment:

  • Blood pressure cuff width: 12-13 cm for adults
  • Surgical incision length: documented in cm
  • Catheter diameter: measured in mm, length in cm

Education and School Supplies

Rulers and Measuring Tools: Most rulers worldwide show centimeters:

  • Standard ruler: 15 cm or 30 cm length
  • Meter stick: 100 cm with cm markings
  • Tape measures: marked in cm (and meters)

Paper Sizes (International ISO 216 Standard):

  • A4 paper: 21 × 29.7 cm (most common worldwide)
  • A5 paper: 14.8 × 21 cm (half of A4)
  • A3 paper: 29.7 × 42 cm (double A4)
  • Letter size (US): 21.6 × 27.9 cm (8.5 × 11 inches)

School Supplies:

  • Pencil length: 19 cm (new)
  • Notebook width: 15-21 cm
  • Eraser length: 4-6 cm

Construction and Home Improvement

Tile Sizes: Floor and wall tiles measured in cm:

  • Small tiles: 10×10 cm
  • Medium tiles: 30×30 cm
  • Large format tiles: 60×60 cm or 80×80 cm
  • Subway tiles: 7.5×15 cm

Furniture Dimensions:

  • Coffee table height: 40-50 cm
  • Dining table height: 75 cm (standard)
  • Chair seat height: 45-50 cm
  • Sofa seat depth: 50-60 cm

Door Measurements:

  • Standard interior door width: 80-90 cm
  • Standard door height: 200-210 cm
  • Door thickness: 3.5-4.5 cm

Art, Design, and Photography

Photo Print Sizes:

  • 10×15 cm (4×6 inches) - standard print
  • 13×18 cm (5×7 inches)
  • 20×25 cm (8×10 inches)
  • 30×40 cm (12×16 inches)

Canvas and Frame Sizes: Art supply stores sell in metric:

  • Small canvas: 20×25 cm
  • Medium canvas: 30×40 cm
  • Large canvas: 50×70 cm

Drawing and Design:

  • Technical drawings: dimensioned in cm or mm
  • Graph paper: 0.5 cm or 1 cm grids
  • Architectural scales: often use 1:50 or 1:100 (cm-based)

Sports and Recreation

Swimming Pool Depth: Measured in cm or meters:

  • Shallow end: 90-120 cm
  • Deep end: 180-300 cm
  • Competition pool depth: minimum 200 cm

Bicycle Frame Sizes: Road bikes measured in cm:

  • Small frame: 48-52 cm
  • Medium frame: 54-56 cm
  • Large frame: 58-62 cm

Sports Equipment:

  • Tennis ball diameter: 6.5-6.7 cm
  • Golf ball diameter: 4.3 cm
  • Basketball diameter: 24 cm

When to Use meters

The meter is the fundamental length unit used across virtually all fields worldwide:

Science and Research

The universal standard in all scientific disciplines. Essential for maintaining consistency in international research and allowing scientists globally to share and compare results.

Scientific Applications:

  • Physics experiments and calculations
  • Chemistry lab measurements
  • Biology specimen measurements
  • Astronomy (often combined with larger units like megameters or astronomical units)
  • Geology and earth sciences
  • Medical research and diagnostics

Why meters in science:

  • SI base unit ensures universal understanding
  • Decimal system simplifies calculations
  • Precise definition based on fundamental constants
  • Required for publication in scientific journals
  • Enables international collaboration

Convert for scientific work: meters to other units


Construction and Engineering

Standard unit for building plans, specifications, and measurements in most countries. Essential for architectural drawings, structural engineering, and construction site work.

Construction uses:

  • Building dimensions and floor plans
  • Material specifications (lumber, pipes, cables)
  • Site surveying and land measurements
  • Road and bridge design
  • Utility installations
  • Safety clearances and regulations

Engineering disciplines:

  • Civil engineering (infrastructure, roads, dams)
  • Mechanical engineering (machine design, tolerances)
  • Electrical engineering (cable runs, installations)
  • Structural engineering (building analysis)

Why meters dominate:

  • International building codes
  • Global supply chains use metric
  • Simplified scaling (1:100, 1:50 drawings)
  • Easy conversion between units (mm, cm, m, km)

Athletics and Sports

The standard for track and field events, swimming pools, and most international sports. Creates consistency in competition and record-keeping worldwide.

Track and Field:

  • All race distances (100m, 200m, 400m, etc.)
  • Field event measurements (high jump, long jump, javelin)
  • Track dimensions (400m oval)

Swimming:

  • Pool lengths (25m, 50m)
  • Race distances
  • Pool depth specifications

Other Sports:

  • Soccer field dimensions
  • Basketball court measurements (FIBA)
  • Tennis court specifications
  • Ski jump distances

World Records: All Olympic and international records use meters


Manufacturing and Industry

Essential for product design, quality control, and manufacturing specifications. Enables global supply chains and standardized parts.

Manufacturing uses:

  • Product dimensions and tolerances
  • Machine specifications
  • Assembly line measurements
  • Quality control standards
  • Shipping container sizes
  • Material cutting and fabrication

Industries:

  • Automotive (car dimensions, parts)
  • Aerospace (aircraft specifications)
  • Electronics (component spacing)
  • Textiles (fabric measurements)
  • Furniture (product dimensions)

Everyday Life (Metric Countries)

Daily measurements for height, distance, and dimensions in 95% of the world's countries.

Personal measurements:

  • Human height and weight
  • Clothing sizes (combined with cm)
  • Recipe distances (rare, but when needed)
  • Home improvement projects

Shopping:

  • Fabric by the meter
  • Carpeting and flooring
  • Curtains and blinds
  • Garden hoses and cables

Driving:

  • Road signs (distances in km, using meters as base)
  • Vehicle dimensions
  • Parking regulations

Use our meter converter for everyday conversions.


Aviation and Maritime

Critical for navigation, altitude, and safety specifications in international travel.

Aviation:

  • Runway lengths
  • Aircraft dimensions
  • Altitude (often in feet, but meters in some regions)
  • Visibility distances

Maritime:

  • Ship dimensions
  • Harbor depths (often in meters or fathoms)
  • Vessel clearances
  • Navigation distances

Medical and Healthcare

Standard for patient measurements and medical equipment in most healthcare systems worldwide.

Medical uses:

  • Patient height
  • Wound measurements
  • Medical imaging distances
  • Equipment specifications
  • Hospital room dimensions
  • Surgical instrument lengths

Additional Unit Information

About Meter (m)

How long is a meter visually?

One meter is about the distance from your nose to your fingertips when you extend your arm straight out to the side.

Visual comparisons:

  • Slightly longer than a yard (1 m = 1.09 yards)
  • About 3.3 feet (one adult stride)
  • Length of a guitar (most acoustic guitars)
  • Width of a single bed
  • Slightly longer than a baseball bat
  • Three average-sized rulers (30cm each)

Body measurements:

  • Most adults can approximate 1 meter with arm span from nose to fingertips
  • One large step/stride for most adults
  • Height from ground to waist/hip for average adult

Common objects exactly 1 meter:

  • Meter stick/ruler (by definition)
  • Certain guitar models
  • Standard yoga mat width (60cm) is just over half a meter

To remember: Think of it as "just over 3 feet" or "slightly longer than a yard"

How many feet are in a meter?

One meter equals approximately 3.28084 feet, commonly rounded to 3.28 feet.

Exact conversion: 1 meter = 3.280839895 feet

Practical conversions:

  • 1 meter ≈ 3.28 feet
  • 2 meters ≈ 6.56 feet
  • 5 meters ≈ 16.4 feet
  • 10 meters ≈ 32.8 feet
  • 100 meters ≈ 328 feet

Reverse conversion (feet to meters):

  • 1 foot = 0.3048 meters (exactly)
  • 3 feet ≈ 0.91 meters
  • 6 feet ≈ 1.83 meters
  • 10 feet ≈ 3.05 meters

Why 3.28?

  • Based on the international foot definition (0.3048 m)
  • 1 meter ÷ 0.3048 meters/foot = 3.28084 feet

Quick estimation: Multiply meters by 3 for a rough approximation (though this underestimates by ~9%)

Use our meter to feet converter for accurate conversions.

How many centimeters are in a meter?

There are exactly 100 centimeters (cm) in one meter.

Why 100?: The prefix "centi-" means 1/100, so a centimeter is 1/100 of a meter.

Conversion:

  • 1 meter = 100 centimeters
  • To convert meters to cm: multiply by 100
  • To convert cm to meters: divide by 100

Examples:

  • 0.5 meters = 50 cm
  • 1.5 meters = 150 cm
  • 2.75 meters = 275 cm
  • 50 cm = 0.5 meters
  • 175 cm = 1.75 meters (typical adult height)

Remember: Move the decimal point two places:

  • Meters → cm: Move right (1.5 m = 150 cm)
  • Cm → meters: Move left (150 cm = 1.5 m)

Use our meter to cm converter for instant conversions.

Is the meter used in the United States?

Officially: The US uses the metric system in science, medicine, military, and many industries, but the US customary system (feet, inches, miles) dominates everyday life.

Where meters ARE used in the US:

  • Science and research: All scientific work
  • Medicine: Patient measurements, medical devices
  • Military: NATO standardization requires metric
  • Manufacturing: Especially for export products
  • Athletics: Track and field events
  • Pharmaceuticals: Drug measurements
  • Automotive: Many car specifications
  • Electronics: Component specifications

Where meters are NOT commonly used:

  • Road signs (miles, not kilometers)
  • Construction (feet, inches)
  • Everyday conversation (height, distance)
  • Cooking (cups, ounces, not liters/grams)
  • Real estate (square feet, acres)
  • Weather (Fahrenheit, not Celsius)

Status: The US is officially metric (Metric Conversion Act of 1975) but implementation is voluntary, so dual systems coexist.

Fun fact: US money is metric (100 cents = 1 dollar), but most Americans don't think of it that way!

How many meters are in a kilometer?

There are exactly 1,000 meters in one kilometer.

Why: "Kilo-" is a Greek prefix meaning 1,000.

Conversion:

  • 1 kilometer (km) = 1,000 meters (m)
  • To convert km to m: multiply by 1,000
  • To convert m to km: divide by 1,000

Examples:

  • 0.5 km = 500 meters
  • 1.5 km = 1,500 meters
  • 2.5 km = 2,500 meters
  • 5 km = 5,000 meters
  • 10 km = 10,000 meters
  • 500 m = 0.5 km
  • 2,000 m = 2 km

Perspective:

  • A kilometer is a common walking distance (10-15 minutes)
  • 5K race = 5 kilometers = 5,000 meters
  • Marathon = 42.195 kilometers = 42,195 meters

Remember: Move the decimal point three places:

  • Km → m: Move right (1.5 km = 1,500 m)
  • M → km: Move left (1,500 m = 1.5 km)

Convert: meters to kilometers | kilometers to meters

How is the meter defined today?

Current Definition (since 1983): The meter is defined as the distance light travels in a vacuum in exactly 1/299,792,458 of a second.

Why this definition?:

  • Universal constant: The speed of light (c) is the same everywhere in the universe
  • Extremely precise: Can be reproduced in any properly equipped laboratory
  • No physical artifact: Doesn't depend on a prototype bar that could degrade
  • Fundamentally stable: Based on physics, not human-made objects

What this means:

  • The speed of light is fixed at exactly 299,792,458 meters per second
  • This definition links length to time (which is measured even more precisely)
  • Any lab with an atomic clock can reproduce the meter

Historical evolution:

  1. 1793: Earth meridian (1/10,000,000 of equator to pole)
  2. 1889: Platinum-iridium bar in Paris
  3. 1960: Krypton-86 wavelengths
  4. 1983: Speed of light (current definition)

Why it matters: This makes the meter one of the most precisely defined and reproducible units in all of science.

What's the difference between meter and metre?

No difference - they are the same unit, just different spellings!

Spelling variations:

  • Meter: American English spelling (US, Philippines)
  • Metre: International English spelling (UK, Canada, Australia, most other English-speaking countries)

Symbol: Both use m as the abbreviation

In practice:

  • Scientific papers: Usually "metre" (international standard)
  • US publications: Usually "meter"
  • International Bureau (BIPM): Uses "metre"
  • Both are 100% correct

Other metric units with dual spellings:

  • Liter / Litre
  • Centimeter / Centimetre
  • Kilometer / Kilometre

Remember: The spelling doesn't affect the measurement - 1 meter = 1 metre = 1 m

How do you convert meters to inches?

To convert meters to inches, multiply by approximately 39.3701.

Conversion formula: inches = meters × 39.3701

Examples:

  • 1 meter = 39.37 inches
  • 2 meters = 78.74 inches
  • 5 meters = 196.85 inches
  • 0.5 meters = 19.69 inches
  • 1.5 meters = 59.06 inches

Reverse conversion (inches to meters):

  • 1 inch = 0.0254 meters (exactly)
  • 12 inches (1 foot) = 0.3048 meters
  • 36 inches (1 yard) = 0.9144 meters

Why 39.37?

  • 1 meter = 100 cm
  • 1 inch = 2.54 cm (exactly)
  • 100 cm ÷ 2.54 cm/inch = 39.37 inches

Quick mental math:

  • 1 meter ≈ 40 inches (close enough for rough estimates)
  • 2.5 cm ≈ 1 inch, so 100 cm ≈ 40 inches

Use our meter to inches converter for precise conversions.

What is 2 meters in feet and inches?

2 meters = 6 feet 6.74 inches (or approximately 6 feet 7 inches)

Calculation:

  • 2 meters = 6.56168 feet
  • 6 full feet = 6 feet
  • 0.56168 feet × 12 inches/foot = 6.74 inches
  • Result: 6 feet 6.74 inches ≈ 6' 7"

Common 2-meter comparisons:

  • Standard doorway height: 2-2.1 meters (6'7" - 6'11")
  • Tall person height: 2 meters is very tall (99th percentile)
  • Basketball player: Many NBA players are around 2 meters
  • High jump bar: Elite athletes clear around 2 meters

Rounded conversions:

  • 2.0 m = 6' 7"
  • 2.1 m = 6' 11"
  • 2.2 m = 7' 3"

Quick reference:

  • 1.5 m = 4' 11"
  • 1.8 m = 5' 11" (average adult male height)
  • 2.0 m = 6' 7"
  • 2.5 m = 8' 2"

Convert any height: meters to feet and inches

How many meters is a football field?

American Football:

  • Playing field: 100 yards = 91.44 meters
  • With end zones: 120 yards = 109.73 meters
  • Width: 53.33 yards = 48.76 meters

Soccer/Football (International):

  • Length: 100-110 meters (typical), 90-120 meters (FIFA rules)
  • Width: 64-75 meters (typical), 45-90 meters (FIFA rules)
  • Standard pitch: 105 × 68 meters

Common comparisons:

  • 100 meters ≈ 1 American football field (length only, not counting end zones)
  • 100 meters = 109.4 yards (9.4 yards longer than American football field)
  • "100-meter dash" ≈ Length of American football field + 9 yards

Useful reference: "100 meters" is a standard way to visualize distance - slightly longer than an American football field.

Why is the meter important?

The meter is the foundation of the metric system, used by 95% of the world's population and essential for global science, trade, and communication.

Scientific importance:

  • Base unit of SI system (international standard)
  • Defined by fundamental constant (speed of light)
  • Essential for all scientific research
  • Enables global collaboration

Practical importance:

  • Universal measurement standard
  • Simplifies international trade
  • Decimal-based (easy calculations)
  • Used in manufacturing, construction, medicine

Global standardization:

  • Ensures products fit across borders
  • Aircraft, ships, vehicles have standard dimensions
  • Medical equipment is universally compatible
  • Scientific data can be shared internationally

Historical significance:

  • Represents the Enlightenment ideal of universal standards
  • First measurement based on nature (Earth meridian)
  • Now based on fundamental physics (speed of light)
  • Symbol of international cooperation

Modern life:

  • GPS and navigation systems
  • International sports records
  • Global supply chains
  • Scientific advancement

Bottom line: The meter makes global communication, commerce, and science possible.

Conversion Table: Centimeter to Meter

Centimeter (cm)Meter (m)
0.50.005
10.01
1.50.015
20.02
50.05
100.1
250.25
500.5
1001
2502.5
5005
1,00010

People Also Ask

How do I convert Centimeter to Meter?

To convert Centimeter to Meter, enter the value in Centimeter in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our length converter page to convert between other units in this category.

Learn more →

What is the conversion factor from Centimeter to Meter?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Centimeter and Meter. 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 Meter back to Centimeter?

Yes! You can easily convert Meter back to Centimeter by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Meter to Centimeter converter page. You can also explore other length conversions on our category page.

Learn more →

What are common uses for Centimeter and Meter?

Centimeter and Meter are both standard units used in length measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our length converter for more conversion options.

For more length conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.

All Length Conversions

Meter to KilometerMeter to HectometerMeter to DecimeterMeter to CentimeterMeter to MillimeterMeter to InchMeter to FootMeter to YardMeter to MileMeter to Nautical MileMeter to MicrometerMeter to NanometerMeter to Light YearMeter to Astronomical UnitMeter to ParsecMeter to AngstromMeter to Point (Typography)Meter to Mil/ThouMeter to FathomMeter to FurlongMeter to Link (Gunter's)Meter to PaceMeter to SpanMeter to DigitMeter to Cable LengthMeter to EllMeter to FingerMeter to Roman MileMeter to StadionMeter to Chi (Chinese)Meter to Shaku (Japanese)Meter to Li (Chinese)Meter to ToiseMeter to BoltMeter to RopeMeter to SmootMeter to SajeneMeter to KenMeter to WaMeter to VaraMeter to AlnMeter to Cubit (Royal/Egyptian)Meter to VerstaMeter to ArpentMeter to Ri (Japanese)Meter to KlafterMeter to YojanaMeter to SkeinKilometer to MeterKilometer to HectometerKilometer to DecimeterKilometer to CentimeterKilometer to MillimeterKilometer to InchKilometer to FootKilometer to YardKilometer to MileKilometer to Nautical MileKilometer to MicrometerKilometer to NanometerKilometer to Light YearKilometer to Astronomical UnitKilometer to ParsecKilometer to AngstromKilometer to Point (Typography)Kilometer to Mil/ThouKilometer to FathomKilometer to FurlongKilometer to Link (Gunter's)Kilometer to PaceKilometer to SpanKilometer to DigitKilometer to Cable LengthKilometer to EllKilometer to FingerKilometer to Roman MileKilometer to StadionKilometer to Chi (Chinese)Kilometer to Shaku (Japanese)Kilometer to Li (Chinese)Kilometer to ToiseKilometer to BoltKilometer to RopeKilometer to SmootKilometer to SajeneKilometer to KenKilometer to WaKilometer to VaraKilometer to AlnKilometer to Cubit (Royal/Egyptian)Kilometer to VerstaKilometer to ArpentKilometer to Ri (Japanese)Kilometer to KlafterKilometer to YojanaKilometer to SkeinHectometer to MeterHectometer to KilometerHectometer to DecimeterHectometer to CentimeterHectometer to MillimeterHectometer to InchHectometer to FootHectometer to YardHectometer to MileHectometer to Nautical MileHectometer to MicrometerHectometer to NanometerHectometer to Light YearHectometer to Astronomical UnitHectometer to ParsecHectometer to AngstromHectometer to Point (Typography)Hectometer to Mil/ThouHectometer to FathomHectometer to FurlongHectometer to Link (Gunter's)Hectometer to PaceHectometer to SpanHectometer to Digit

Verified Against Authority Standards

All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.

NIST Guide for the Use of SI

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyOfficial US standards for length measurements

SI Brochure

Bureau International des Poids et MesuresInternational System of Units official documentation

Last verified: December 3, 2025