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Millimeters to Feet (mm to ft)

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Millimetres-to-feet conversions translate metric precision-engineering and architectural-detail figures into US-customary feet-and-inches format for trade-document and US-jurisdiction display. A 1500 mm metric door-width spec rolls up to 4 ft 11 in on a US-trade-document doorway-fit reference; a 3000 mm metric ceiling-beam spec rolls up to 9 ft 10 in on a US-residential trade document; a 600 mm metric appliance-width rolls up to 1 ft 11.6 in for US-kitchen-cabinet recess fit-up. The conversion runs at every metric-precision-spec to US-customary-trade-execution boundary, particularly common in metric-imported equipment installation and metric-architectural-drawing translation for US trade execution. The math runs cleanly at four decimal places (mm × 0.00328084) but rolls up to feet-and-inches for US conversational display.

How to convert Millimeters to Feet

Formula

ft = mm × 0.00328084

To convert millimetres to feet, multiply the mm figure by 0.00328084 — equivalently, divide by 304.8, the mm value of one foot. The factor follows from the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement, with the inch fixed at exactly 25.4 mm and the foot transitively defined as 12 × 25.4 = 304.8 mm. The result is decimal feet; convert the decimal portion to inches by multiplying by 12 for the US-conversational feet-and-inches format. For mental math, "mm ÷ 305" is a usable approximation; for trade-document precision use the full 0.00328084 multiplier. The conversion runs at every metric-precision-spec to US-customary-trade-execution boundary, particularly common in metric-imported equipment installation and metric-architectural-drawing translation for US trade execution.

Worked examples

Example 11000 mm

One thousand millimetres — exactly 1 metre — converts to 1000 × 0.00328084 = 3.281 ft, which converts to 3 ft 3.4 in in US feet-and-inches format. That is the canonical metric-to-US-customary precision-length reference for the most common metric "1 metre" benchmark.

Example 21500 mm

One thousand five hundred millimetres — a typical metric door-width spec — converts to 1500 × 0.00328084 = 4.921 ft, which converts to 4 ft 11.1 in or rounded to 4 ft 11 in. That is the figure on a US-trade-document doorway-fit reference for a metric-imported door, with the mm-figure on the European spec and the feet-and-inches figure on the US-trade execution.

Example 37320 mm

Seven thousand three hundred and twenty millimetres — the FIFA-spec football goal width — converts to 7320 × 0.00328084 = 24.016 ft, which converts to 24 ft 0.2 in or rounded to 24 ft 0 in. That is the figure on a US-stadium-build trade document for a FIFA-spec goal, the standard international football goal width preserved across every FIFA-sanctioned venue.

mm to ft conversion table

mmft
1 mm0.0033 ft
2 mm0.0066 ft
3 mm0.0098 ft
4 mm0.0131 ft
5 mm0.0164 ft
6 mm0.0197 ft
7 mm0.023 ft
8 mm0.0262 ft
9 mm0.0295 ft
10 mm0.0328 ft
15 mm0.0492 ft
20 mm0.0656 ft
25 mm0.082 ft
30 mm0.0984 ft
40 mm0.1312 ft
50 mm0.164 ft
75 mm0.2461 ft
100 mm0.3281 ft
150 mm0.4921 ft
200 mm0.6562 ft
250 mm0.8202 ft
500 mm1.6404 ft
750 mm2.4606 ft
1000 mm3.2808 ft
2500 mm8.2021 ft
5000 mm16.4042 ft

Common mm to ft conversions

  • 100 mm=0.3281 ft
  • 500 mm=1.6404 ft
  • 1000 mm=3.2808 ft
  • 1500 mm=4.9213 ft
  • 2000 mm=6.5617 ft
  • 2500 mm=8.2021 ft
  • 3000 mm=9.8425 ft
  • 5000 mm=16.4042 ft
  • 10000 mm=32.8084 ft
  • 25000 mm=82.021 ft

What is a Millimeter?

One millimetre (mm) is exactly 0.001 metre — one thousandth of the SI base unit of length — and equivalently exactly 0.1 cm or 1,000 micrometres. Like all metric prefixed submultiples the millimetre rides transitively on the metre's definition by the speed of light (fixed at exactly 299,792,458 m/s) and the second's caesium-133 hyperfine reference, with no separate definitional act required and no measurement uncertainty in conversions between SI prefixed lengths. The millimetre sits among SI's preferred prefixed submultiples: BIPM SI Brochure house style favours prefixes representing 10ⁿ where n is a multiple of three (kilo, milli, micro, nano, pico) over those representing other powers, and engineering drawings, scientific publications and ISO/DIN/BSI/JIS specification sheets default to millimetres for human-scale dimensions accordingly. The square millimetre (mm²) is the standard unit of cross-sectional area for electrical cable conductors and small-section structural members; the cubic millimetre (mm³) appears in microfluidics, biological-tissue volumetrics and pharmaceutical dosing. Below the millimetre, machinist and ultra-precision engineering practice descends to the micrometre (μm, 10⁻³ mm) and the nanometre (nm, 10⁻⁶ mm) — all members of the same preferred-prefix-of-1000 ladder, with the unit transition usually triggered when the leading digit drops below 1 in the parent unit.

The millimetre's importance is industrial rather than legal: its place in the metric law of 1795 was a routine consequence of the prefix system, but its rise to engineering dominance is a twentieth-century story. The Loi du 18 germinal an III, dated 7 April 1795, defined the metre and the standard prefixes — milli- from the Latin mille, "thousand", attached to mètre to give a unit of one thousandth. The smaller submultiple stayed largely a scientific quantity for the next century, with handcraft and architectural dimensions sitting comfortably in centimetres and metres. The rise of precision interchangeable manufacturing in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries — at Colt and Remington in the United States, at Mauser and Krupp in Germany, at the British armouries — pushed dimensional tolerance below the centimetre and into the tenth and hundredth of a millimetre, the natural domain of the calliper, the micrometer screw gauge and the gauge block. National standards bodies (BSI founded 1901, DIN 1917, AFNOR 1926) and the international ISO (founded 1947) progressively standardised millimetre-based drafting conventions across European industry through the inter-war and post-WWII decades. The watershed for the unit's modern status came at the 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures in 1960, which named the millimetre a preferred SI submultiple — its prefix changes the metre by exactly one thousand, matching SI's preferred-prefix house style. ISO 128 (technical-drawing principles), ISO 5457 (drawing-sheet sizes) and ISO 129 (dimensioning conventions) then embedded the millimetre into the world's mechanical-drawing offices, and British architectural practice formally converted drawings from feet-and-inches to millimetres in the early 1970s, the RIBA Architects' Handbook driving the conversion through construction by mid-decade.

The millimetre is the working unit of professional engineering and several specialised industries that adopted it globally regardless of the surrounding national measurement culture. Engineering drafting: ISO 128 (technical-drawing principles), ISO 5457 (drawing-sheet sizes A0 through A4) and ISO 129 (dimensioning conventions) all default to millimetre dimensioning for mechanical drawings, and DIN, BSI, JIS and AFNOR equivalents follow suit. The standard convention is to express every length on the drawing in millimetres without per-line unit symbols, with the unit declared once in the title block — so a "150" on a drawing means 150 mm and a "1500" means 1500 mm, even where 1.5 m would read more naturally aloud. Architectural practice adopted the same convention as British architectural drawings converted from feet-and-inches in the early 1970s. Tolerance specifications follow the same scale: ±0.1 mm for medium-precision parts and ±0.01 mm for precision aerospace and instrument work, with ISO 4287 specifying surface-finish parameters Ra and Rz in micrometres below that. Firearms: metric cartridge nomenclature encodes the millimetre directly into the cartridge name. The 9×19 mm Parabellum (introduced 1902 by DWM for the Luger pistol), the 7.62×39 mm intermediate cartridge (Soviet M43, 1943) and the 5.56×45 mm NATO round (standardised by STANAG 4172 in 1980) each record bullet diameter and case length in millimetres in that order. Imperial-tradition cartridges (.45 ACP, .308 Winchester, .223 Remington) instead encode bullet diameter in inches paired with a manufacturer or design name, and the two nomenclature traditions coexist on every gun-shop shelf in the United States, with the same firearms manufacturer producing the same model rifle in both metric and imperial chamberings. Photography and optics: lens focal lengths are quoted in millimetres globally regardless of the country's broader metric-or-imperial culture — a 50mm standard portrait lens, an 85mm short telephoto, a 24-70mm general-purpose zoom — and have been since the early twentieth century, when 35 mm motion-picture film established the metric reference across the cinema and stills industries. The convention extends to filter thread diameters (52mm, 67mm, 77mm), to lens-mount registration distances (Canon EF at 44.0 mm, Sony E at 18.0 mm, Nikon Z at 16.0 mm) that define interchangeability across camera bodies, and to sensor-pixel pitches measured in micrometres for high-density imagers. Meteorology: rainfall is measured in millimetres worldwide under WMO standards, with the useful identity that one millimetre of rainfall over one square metre is exactly one litre of water — the basis for hydrological catchment budgeting. Snowfall, by contrast, is conventionally reported in centimetres (and in some North American services in inches) under the same WMO conventions, an asymmetry that recognises the different practical scales of the two phenomena: a heavy hourly rainfall might be 50 mm and a heavy snowfall 30 cm, the units calibrated so the digits of practical interest fall in a readable range. ISO 216 paper sizes are specified in millimetres throughout (A4 is 210 × 297 mm). Beyond these, the millimetre dominates jewellery (gemstone diameters, ring widths), pharmaceuticals (tablet diameters, capsule lengths), audio cabling (the 3.5 mm "minijack" portable connector and the 6.35 mm "quarter-inch" professional standard, both specified in IEC 60130-9) and countless small-component industries where the centimetre is too coarse and the metre nonsensical.

What is a Foot?

One international foot equals exactly 0.3048 metre by the International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959. The foot is divided into 12 inches; three feet make one yard, and 5,280 feet make one statute mile. The standard textual symbol is "ft"; in technical drawings, architectural plans and surveying notation the prime symbol ′ (Unicode U+2032) is used for the foot and the double prime ″ (U+2033) for the inch, so a height of six feet two inches is correctly written 6′ 2″. The earlier US Survey Foot, defined by the 1893 Mendenhall Order as 1200/3937 metre (approximately 0.304800609 m) and retained for geodetic and state-plane work long after 1959, was jointly deprecated by NIST and NOAA's National Geodetic Survey effective 1 January 2023. The foot is recognised by NIST for customary use under Federal Register notice 24 FR 5445, the same instrument that recognises the avoirdupois pound.

The English foot belongs to a family of body-derived length units that descend, by way of the Roman pes, from the Greek pous: the Olympic foot used in stadium-track measurement was about 316 mm and the shorter Attic foot about 308 mm, both rooted in the practical idea that a useful unit of length should be roughly the length of an adult man's foot. The Roman pes, around 296 mm, was divided into sixteen digiti or twelve unciae — and that twelve-part division is the direct ancestor of the twelve-inch foot we use today. Medieval Europe again produced regional variants: the Belgic or "northern" foot at roughly 333 mm, the rather shorter North German foot at about 285 mm, and a clutch of English county and trade feet that varied measurably from one market town to the next. Standardisation in England was a long, statutory affair. Edward I's Compositio Ulnarum et Perticarum, around 1303, fixed three feet to one yard, and Elizabeth I's statute of 1593 set the statute mile at 5,280 feet — eight furlongs of 660 feet apiece. The Imperial Weights and Measures Act of 1824 consolidated those statutes around a brass yard standard kept at Westminster, which was destroyed alongside the pound and yard standards in the 1834 Palace of Westminster fire. The defining moment of the modern foot, however, was the International Yard and Pound Agreement, signed on 1 July 1959 by the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa: it set the international foot at exactly 0.3048 metre and so closed a small but persistent transatlantic gap between the American and Commonwealth definitions. The American foot had been defined since the 1893 Mendenhall Order as 1200/3937 metre — about 0.30480061 m — and that older value, renamed the US Survey Foot, was retained for geodetic surveying and state-plane coordinate systems for another six decades. NIST and NOAA's National Geodetic Survey jointly deprecated the US Survey Foot effective 1 January 2023, after a public-comment process that began in October 2019; from that date the international foot of exactly 0.3048 m is the sole legally-recognised foot in the United States.

Aviation is the foot's most prominent surviving professional habitat. ICAO standards record aircraft altitudes in feet worldwide — a typical commercial cruise of 35,000 ft is universally referred to as "flight level 350" (FL350), regardless of whether the surrounding airspace is metric for any other purpose — and pilot training, autopilot logic, certified altimeters, terrain charts and air-traffic-control phraseology all run on feet. Russia and several post-Soviet states held out for metres until the 2010s, when most aligned with ICAO feet, leaving China and North Korea as the conspicuous remaining holdouts for metric vertical separation in controlled airspace. Outside aviation, the foot remains everyday currency in the United States: residential and commercial construction, real estate listings, dimensional lumber, pipe and conduit lengths, ceiling heights, and personal height all default to feet and inches. The petroleum industry — including national oil companies in fully metric jurisdictions — measures drilling depth in feet, a convention inherited from American oilfield equipment and tool joints. The United Kingdom officially metricated for trade in 2000 but still posts low-bridge and tunnel-clearance signs in feet and inches alongside metres, and personal height is still quoted in feet and inches across casual British, Irish and Canadian usage. American football and Canadian football mark out the field in yards and feet (the 100-yard playing field plus two 10-yard end zones is 360 ft from end-line to end-line).

Real-world uses for Millimeters to Feet

Metric-imported precision equipment installation in US trade work

Metric-imported precision equipment (German CNC machine tools, Italian textile machinery, Japanese semiconductor lithography equipment) is specced in millimetres on the manufacturer documentation but installed by US trade workers using feet-and-inches tape-measure-and-laser-level setup. A 1500 mm machine-base width rolls up to 4 ft 11.1 in on the US-trade installation worksheet; a 2200 mm column height rolls up to 7 ft 2.6 in. The conversion runs at every metric-equipment-import installation in US industrial settings.

European-architectural drawings translated to US-trade execution feet-and-inches

European-headquartered architectural firms (Foster + Partners, Zaha Hadid Architects, Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Heatherwick Studio) on US-located projects translate millimetre-precision architectural drawings to US-trade-document feet-and-inches for US-trade-union construction execution. A 1200 mm doorway width rolls up to 3 ft 11.2 in on the US-trade document; a 3600 mm ceiling height rolls up to 11 ft 9.8 in. The conversion runs at every European-firm-on-US-project drawing-to-trade-document translation.

Metric-precision sport equipment specs translated to US-customary venue dimensions

Metric-precision sport equipment (FIFA-spec football goals, FIBA-spec basketball rims, IAAF-spec track-and-field hurdles, ITTF-spec table-tennis tables) is specified in millimetres on the international federation documentation but US-jurisdiction venue construction translates to feet-and-inches for US-trade execution. A 7320 mm FIFA goal width rolls up to 24 ft 0.3 in on the US-stadium-build trade document; a 305 mm FIBA rim height-from-top-edge rolls up to 1 ft 0 in. The conversion runs at every international-federation-spec to US-venue-construction translation.

Metric-precision medical equipment translated to US-hospital installation specs

Metric-precision medical equipment (Siemens MRI scanners from Germany, Philips CT scanners from Netherlands, GE Healthcare-Asia ultrasound systems) installed in US hospitals translates millimetre-precision installation requirements to feet-and-inches for US-trade-union installation execution. A 2400 mm scanner-bay width rolls up to 7 ft 10.5 in on the US-hospital-installation trade document; a 2700 mm ceiling height rolls up to 8 ft 10.3 in. The conversion runs at every metric-medical-equipment to US-hospital-installation translation.

When to use Feet instead of Millimeters

Use feet whenever the destination is a US-trade-document, US-stadium-build construction document, US-hospital-equipment installation worksheet, US-jurisdiction venue dimension or any US-customary trade-execution document where feet-and-inches is the everyday format. Stay in millimetres when the destination is a metric architectural or engineering drawing, metric precision-equipment specification, international sport-federation spec or any metric-precision documentation where mm-precision is the natural source unit. The conversion is at the metric-precision-spec to US-customary-trade-execution boundary, with the mm-figure on the source-precision side and the feet-and-inches figure on the US-trade-execution side. For dual-jurisdiction projects both formats typically appear, with the mm-figure on the underlying drawing and the feet-and-inches on the US-trade document.

Common mistakes converting mm to ft

  • Confusing millimetres-to-feet (divide by 305 approximately) with centimetres-to-feet (divide by 30.5 approximately). Both are metric-to-customary conversions but at different scale steps, and mixing them up gives a tenfold error. The conversion-factor pair is mm × 0.00328084 versus cm × 0.0328084.
  • Reporting decimal feet (4.921 ft) to a US trade audience rather than converting to feet-and-inches (4 ft 11 in). US trade workers almost never quote dimensions in decimal feet; the customary form is feet-and-inches throughout. Always convert the decimal portion to inches by multiplying by 12.

Frequently asked questions

How many feet in 1500 mm?

One thousand five hundred millimetres equals 1500 × 0.00328084 = 4.921 ft, which converts to 4 ft 11 in in US conversational feet-and-inches format. That is a typical metric door-width spec, with the mm-figure on the European product spec and the feet-and-inches figure on the US-trade-document doorway-fit reference.

How many feet in 1000 mm (1 metre)?

One thousand millimetres — exactly 1 metre — equals 3.281 ft, which converts to 3 ft 3.4 in. That is the canonical metric-to-US-customary precision-length reference for the most common metric "1 metre" benchmark, with the mm-to-feet factor of 0.00328084 fixed by the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement.

How many mm in 1 foot?

One foot equals exactly 304.8 mm, fixed by the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement. The factor is exact rather than approximate, derived from the 12-inch foot at the 25.4-mm inch standard. The same 304.8 mm relationship has been preserved across every modern metric-and-US-customary length-system documentation.

Quick way to convert mm to feet in my head?

Divide by 305 for a quick approximation, recognising the result understates by about 0.07%. For 1500 mm the shortcut gives 4.92 ft versus the precise 4.921 ft — essentially identical. For trade-document precision and US-conversational feet-and-inches output, run the conversion on a calculator and convert the decimal portion to inches.

When does mm-to-feet conversion appear in US trade work?

Mm-to-feet appears in metric-imported equipment installation (German CNC, Italian textile, Japanese semiconductor lithography), European-architectural drawings on US-located projects (Foster + Partners, Zaha Hadid, Renzo Piano), metric sport-federation specs translated for US-jurisdiction venues (FIFA, FIBA, IAAF), and metric-precision medical equipment in US hospitals (Siemens, Philips, GE Healthcare-Asia). The conversion is uncommon in domestic US-only trade work but routine in metric-import contexts. The pattern in each case is metric-source spec translated to US-trade-document feet-and-inches for US-trade-union execution.

How precise should mm-to-feet be for trade execution?

For US-trade execution the mm-to-feet conversion is exact, but the destination feet-and-inches format typically rounds to the nearest 1/16 inch (0.0625 in or 1.59 mm precision). The cm-rolling and feet-rolling for US-conversational display loses some metric-source precision, but US-trade tape-measure precision is typically ±1/16 in and the rounding at the conversion step matches that practical limit.

How many feet in a FIFA-spec football goal width?

FIFA-spec football goals are 7320 mm wide, which converts to 24.016 ft or rounded to 24 ft 0.2 in. That is the standard international football goal width preserved across every FIFA-sanctioned venue globally, including US-jurisdiction stadiums hosting World Cup and FIFA-club tournaments. The mm-figure is the international federation spec; the feet-and-inches figure appears on US-stadium-build trade documents for US trade-union construction execution.