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23 units available
6 categories total
To convert acres to hectares: multiply by 0.4047. To m²: multiply by 4,046.86. To ft²: multiply by 43,560.
1 acre = 43,560 ft² = 4,840 yd² = 4,046.86 m² ≈ 0.4047 ha. 640 acres = 1 mi².
For example, 1 Acre (ac) = 0.999996 Acre (US Survey) (ac (US)).
| Acre (ac) | Acre (US Survey) (ac (US)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 0.0999996 |
| 0.5 | 0.499998 |
| 1 | 0.999996 |
| 2 | 1.999992 |
| 5 | 4.99998 |
| 10 | 9.99996 |
| 25 | 24.9999 |
| 50 | 49.9998 |
| 100 | 99.9996 |
| 500 | 499.998 |
| 1000 | 999.996 |
The acre is a unit of area equal to 43,560 square feet (4,046.86 m²), historically the area a team of oxen could plow in one day.
1 acre = 43,560 ft² = 4,840 yd² = 4,046.86 m² ≈ 0.4047 ha. 640 acres = 1 mi².
To convert acres to hectares: multiply by 0.4047. To m²: multiply by 4,046.86. To ft²: multiply by 43,560.
Real estate listings, farmland area, lot sizes, park acreages, and zoning regulations.
A US football field (including end zones) is about 1.32 acres. Central Park in NYC is 843 acres. An acre is about 75% of a football field.
Thinking an acre is a square shape — it can be any shape with the right total area. Also, confusing acre with hectare (1 acre ≈ 0.4 ha).
Imagine a football field without the end zones — that's roughly 1 acre. Or 16 tennis courts side by side.
The US survey acre is a historical unit of area based on the US survey foot, equal to approximately 4,046.873 m².
1 US survey acre ≈ 4,046.873 m². Differs from international acre (4,046.856 m²) by about 0.016 m².
To convert US survey acres to m²: multiply by 4,046.873. To international acres: multiply by ~1.000004.
Historical US land surveys, old property deeds, and State Plane Coordinate System calculations.
The difference between US survey and international acre is about 0.016 m² — roughly the area of a sheet of paper. Over large areas, it adds up.
Using US survey acre in new calculations — it's been deprecated since 2023. Use the international acre instead.
As of 2023, the US survey foot and acre are retired. All US measurements now use the international definitions.



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