square feet to square meters

Unit Converters

square feetsquare meters
Area (m²) = Area (sq ft) × 0.092903
  • Area (m²): Area in square meters.
  • Area (sq ft): Area in square feet.
  • 0.092903: Area conversion constant (0.3048²).

Square Foot to Square Meter Conversion Table

Square Foot [sq ft]Square Meter [m²]
0.01 sq ft0.0009290313 m²
0.1 sq ft0.009290313 m²
1 sq ft0.0929031299 m²
2 sq ft0.1858062598 m²
3 sq ft0.2787093897 m²
5 sq ft0.4645156495 m²
10 sq ft0.9290312991 m²
20 sq ft1.8580625981 m²
50 sq ft4.6451564953 m²
100 sq ft9.2903129906 m²
1,000 sq ft92.9031299064 m²

What is square feet to square meters?

The conversion between Square Feet (sq ft) and Square Meters (m²) is one of the most essential calculations in the global real estate, construction, and interior design industries. It acts as the primary translator between the Imperial/US Customary systems and the Metric system (SI). Whether you are comparing apartment sizes in New York to those in Paris or ordering flooring materials from an international supplier, understanding the mathematical relationship between these two units of area is crucial.
Understanding the Values

Square Foot (sq ft): A unit of area equal to a square with sides of exactly one foot (12 inches). It is the standard unit for residential and commercial floor space in the United States and the United Kingdom.
Square Meter (m²): The SI unit of area, representing a square with sides of exactly one meter. It is used by the vast majority of the world for all scientific and legal land measurements.
0.092903: This is the Area Conversion Constant. It is derived mathematically by squaring the international linear foot: 0.3048 × 0.3048 = 0.09290304. This ensures that the two-dimensional relationship remains perfectly proportional to the one-dimensional standard.

History and Origin

A History of Two Dimensions
The history of the square-feet-to-square-meters converter is a story of how humanity moved from localized, body-part-based measurements to a universal, planetary standard.
The Foot and the Floor
The "foot" was a unit of length used by almost every ancient civilization, from the Greeks to the Romans, typically based on the length of a human foot. When these units were squared to measure land or floor space, they remained highly localized. A "square foot" in a German kingdom might be significantly larger than a "square foot" in an English county. This made international trade in textiles and building materials incredibly difficult.
The Birth of the Metric Square
In the 1790s, the French Academy of Sciences introduced the meter, defined as one ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole to the Equator. By squaring this meter, they created a unit of area that was not based on any king or merchant, but on the size of the Earth itself. The "Square Meter" became the symbol of a rational, decimal-based world.
The 1959 Unification
For centuries, the American "square foot" and the British "square foot" were slightly different because their underlying linear feet didn't match perfectly. This was finally resolved by the International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959, which legally defined the foot in terms of the meter. By setting 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, the world created a permanent, unchanging mathematical bridge for area conversion.
Today, this converter is programmed into every architectural software and real estate app, ensuring that a "1,000 square foot" apartment is recognized as approximately "93 square meters" anywhere in the world.

What is Square Foot?

Definition & Usage

The square foot (symbol: sq ft) is an imperial unit and US customary unit (non-SI, non-metric) of area, used mainly in the United States and the United Kingdom.

What is Square Meter?

Definition & Usage

The square meter (symbol: m²) is the SI derived unit of area. It is defined as the area of a square whose sides measure exactly one meter.

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate is this square feet to square meters tool?

Our tools utilize high-precision floating point math guaranteeing accuracy up to the 6th decimal place.

Is this free to use?

Yes, all converters and calculators on ToolsMetrics are 100% free with no limits.

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