Acreage Calculator

Use this free acreage calculator to quickly determine the size of land in acres. Enter dimensions like length and width to get accurate results, making it easy to measure plots, farms, yards, and real estate properties for planning and development.

By ConstructlyTools · Published: March 29, 2026 · Updated: April 11, 2026
Acreage Calculator
📐 Formula
Acres = (Length × Width in feet) ÷ 43,560 · 1 acre = 43,560 sq ft = 4,840 sq yd = 0.4047 hectares
Total Acreage
Enter length and width above
Square Feet
Square Yards
Hectares
Square Miles

1 acre = 43,560 sq ft · A square acre measures approx 208.7 × 208.7 ft · 1 mile² = 640 acres · A standard city block ≈ 2–5 acres

How Does the Acreage Calculator Work?

This calculator converts any length and width measurement into acres — the standard US unit of land area. Enter your dimensions in feet, yards, meters, miles, or surveying chains, choose your lot shape (rectangle, triangle, or circle), and the calculator instantly shows acreage plus square feet, square yards, hectares, and square miles.

Acreage is used for land purchase and sale, property tax assessment, zoning and permit applications, agricultural planning, and landscaping cost estimation. Knowing the exact acreage of a parcel is essential before purchasing, fencing, or planning any development.

💡 How to Find Your Lot's Acreage Without Measuring

Your property's acreage is recorded on your deed, in your county assessor's records (usually searchable online for free), and on your property tax bill. You can also look up any parcel's acreage using your county's GIS mapping portal — search "[your county] GIS parcel viewer" to find it. For legal purposes, always use the recorded deed acreage rather than a calculated estimate.

Acreage Reference Guide

It's hard to visualize acreage without a reference point. Here are common comparisons to help put lot sizes in perspective.

AcreageSq FtDimensions (if square)Comparable To
0.10 acre4,356 sq ft66 × 66 ftTypical urban row home lot
0.25 acre10,890 sq ft104 × 104 ftStandard suburban lot (quarter acre)
0.50 acre21,780 sq ft147 × 147 ftHalf-acre — room for large yard & outbuilding
1 acre43,560 sq ft209 × 209 ftStandard football field minus end zones
2 acres87,120 sq ft295 × 295 ftSmall hobby farm lot
5 acres217,800 sq ft467 × 467 ftSmall farm / large rural homestead
10 acres435,600 sq ft660 × 660 ftMedium farm parcel — ¼ mile × ¼ mile
40 acres1,742,400 sq ft1,320 × 1,320 ftUSGS quarter-quarter section
640 acres27,878,400 sq ft1 mile × 1 mile1 square mile = 1 section (PLSS)
✅ The Quarter-Acre Lot — Most Common US Suburban Standard

The quarter-acre lot (10,890 sq ft, approximately 75×145 ft for a typical rectangular suburban lot) has been the standard US suburban lot size since the post-WWII housing boom. Most zoning codes in established suburbs are built around this lot size for setback, coverage, and accessory structure rules. Lots smaller than 0.15 acres are common in urban areas and newer density-zoned developments; lots larger than 0.5 acres are typical in rural and semi-rural areas.

Acreage Unit Conversion Table

FromTo AcresMultiply ByExample
Square FeetAcres÷ 43,56087,120 sq ft ÷ 43,560 = 2 acres
Square YardsAcres÷ 4,8409,680 sq yd ÷ 4,840 = 2 acres
Square MetersAcres÷ 4,046.868,093.7 sq m ÷ 4,046.86 = 2 acres
HectaresAcres× 2.47111 hectare × 2.4711 = 2.47 acres
Square MilesAcres× 6400.5 sq mi × 640 = 320 acres
AcresSquare Feet× 43,5602.5 acres × 43,560 = 108,900 sq ft
AcresHectares× 0.40475 acres × 0.4047 = 2.02 hectares

Example Calculations

Example 1 — Standard Suburban Lot

Lot dimensions: 75 ft wide × 145 ft deep

75 × 145 = 10,875 sq ft

10,875 ÷ 43,560 = 0.2496 acres ≈ ¼ acre

Example 2 — Rural Parcel in Acres

Field: 1,320 ft × 660 ft (half mile × quarter mile)

1,320 × 660 = 871,200 sq ft

871,200 ÷ 43,560 = 20 acres

Example 3 — Converting Hectares to Acres

Property listed as 3.5 hectares (common in Canada/Europe)

3.5 × 2.4711 = 8.65 acres

8.65 × 43,560 = 376,794 sq ft

Example 4 — Triangular Lot

Corner lot: 200 ft base × 180 ft height (right triangle)

Area = ½ × 200 × 180 = 18,000 sq ft

18,000 ÷ 43,560 = 0.413 acres

Frequently Asked Questions

How many square feet are in an acre?+
There are exactly 43,560 square feet in one acre. To convert square feet to acres, divide by 43,560. To convert acres to square feet, multiply by 43,560. A square acre (if perfectly square) would measure approximately 208.71 × 208.71 feet. In practice, most lots are rectangular with dimensions like 150×290 ft or 75×145 ft — both close to a quarter acre.
How big is an acre visually?+
An acre is approximately the size of a standard American football field minus the end zones (the playing field is 100 yards × 53.3 yards = 48,000 sq ft, slightly larger than 1 acre). Other helpful comparisons: 16 tennis courts, a circle with a 235-foot diameter, or a square roughly 209 × 209 feet. A quarter-acre suburban lot is approximately the size of a 75 × 145 ft rectangle — a typical house with a front and back yard.
How do I calculate acreage from feet?+
Multiply length (ft) × width (ft) to get square feet, then divide by 43,560 to get acres. Example: a 330 × 660 ft parcel = 217,800 sq ft ÷ 43,560 = 5 acres. The calculator above handles this automatically for any input unit — feet, yards, meters, miles, or surveying chains.
How many acres is a typical house lot?+
The median US suburban lot size is approximately 0.20–0.25 acres (8,700–10,890 sq ft). Urban infill lots can be as small as 0.05–0.10 acres. Rural residential lots are commonly 0.5–2 acres. Agricultural parcels range from 5 acres to hundreds of acres. The minimum lot size for your area is set by local zoning ordinances — always check your municipal zoning code before purchasing land for development.
What is the difference between an acre and a hectare?+
A hectare is the metric equivalent of an acre and is used in most countries outside the US. 1 hectare = 10,000 square meters = 2.471 acres. 1 acre = 0.4047 hectares. A square hectare measures 100 × 100 meters. When buying property in Canada, the UK, or Australia, listings often show hectares — multiply by 2.471 to convert to acres for comparison with US listings.
How many acres do I need for a horse?+
The standard recommendation is 1–2 acres of pasture per horse for grazing, plus additional dry lot area. For a horse property with 2 horses, you'd want a minimum of 3–5 acres — 2–4 acres of pasture plus space for a barn, paddock, and driveway. Well-managed rotational grazing can support 1 horse per acre in good-quality grass regions. Drought-prone or sandy soil regions may need 3–5 acres per horse. Always check local agricultural zoning before purchasing land for horses.
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