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Last updated: May 05, 2026

Square Meter Calculator

Muhammad Shoaib - Urban & Infrastructure Planning Expert
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Muhammad Shoaib
Urban & Infrastructure Planning Expert
Muhammad Shoaib
Muhammad Shoaib
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Muhammad Shoaib is an Urban and Infrastructure Planning expert with over 20 years of global experience delivering large-scale development and infrastructure projects across Pakistan, the Middle East, and South Asia. As Chief Executive of Spatial Logics Consulting, he has worked with governments, multilateral agencies, and private sector developers on urban planning, land use, and infrastructure initiatives where accurate material volume planning and estimation are critical. His real-world experience in planning and managing complex projects adds strong authority and practical insight to tools like the Cubic Yard Calculator, ensuring calculations align with industry-level planning and execution standards. See full profile

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Square meters are the international standard unit for measuring area. Whether you are calculating how much flooring a room needs, estimating the paint required to cover a wall, quoting a landscaping project, or reading a property listing, the answer is almost always expressed in square meters. Yet calculating area correctly — accounting for the right shape, using consistent units, and applying the right formula — trips up homeowners, tradespeople, and even seasoned project managers more often than it should.

The Square Meter Calculator at Intelligent Calculator removes every source of error from that process. It handles rectangles, squares, triangles, circles, trapezoids, and L-shaped rooms. It accepts input in meters, centimeters, feet, inches, or yards, and converts everything automatically. It calculates area with built-in waste allowance for flooring and tiling projects, estimates material quantities and costs, and even converts blueprint measurements from scale drawings into real-world dimensions.

This guide explains how square meter calculation works, walks through the formulas for every common shape, shows you real examples with step-by-step arithmetic, and gives you the reference benchmarks you need to plan any area-based project accurately.

 

What Is a Square Meter?

A square meter, written as m², is the area enclosed by a square that measures exactly one meter on each side. It is the standard unit of area in the International System of Units (SI) used in science, engineering, construction, and real estate across most of the world. One square meter equals 10,000 square centimeters, 1,000,000 square millimeters, approximately 10.764 square feet, or approximately 1.196 square yards.

Area is a two-dimensional measurement — it describes how much surface a shape covers. Unlike length, which is measured in a straight line, area accounts for both dimensions of a flat surface: how long it is and how wide it is. A room that is 4 meters long and 3 meters wide has an area of 12 square meters regardless of its height, because area describes only the floor plane.

Square meters appear in almost every practical context involving surfaces. Property sizes are listed in square meters in most countries outside the United States. Flooring, wall tiles, carpet, paint, insulation, solar panels, garden turf, concrete slabs, and roofing materials are all sold and estimated in square meters. Building regulations specify minimum room areas in square meters. Understanding how to calculate and use square meters is a fundamental practical skill.

 

Square Meter Formulas for Every Shape

Rectangle and Square

The rectangle is the most common shape in practical area calculations. Rooms, walls, gardens, driveways, and most building footprints are rectangular or can be broken into rectangles. The formula is the simplest in geometry.

Area = Length × Width

For a square, length and width are equal, so the formula becomes Area = Side². A room 5.2 meters long and 3.8 meters wide has an area of 5.2 × 3.8 = 19.76 square meters. A square patio 4 meters on each side has an area of 4 × 4 = 16 square meters. Both values are instantly returned by the calculator when you enter the two dimensions.

Triangle

Triangular areas appear in gable ends of roofs, corner sections of gardens, and architectural features. The formula uses the base and the perpendicular height — the height measured at a right angle to the base, not along a sloping side.

Area = (Base × Height) ÷ 2

A triangular garden bed with a base of 6 meters and a perpendicular height of 4 meters has an area of (6 × 4) ÷ 2 = 12 square meters. When the perpendicular height is not known but all three sides are known, the calculator applies Heron’s Formula: first computing the semi-perimeter s = (a + b + c) ÷ 2, then calculating Area = √(s(s−a)(s−b)(s−c)).

Circle

Circular areas are common in landscape design, pool decks, circular driveways, and decorative features. The formula uses the radius — the distance from the center to the edge — and the mathematical constant pi (π ≈ 3.14159).

Area = π × Radius²

A circular flower bed 3 meters in diameter has a radius of 1.5 meters. Its area is π × 1.5² = π × 2.25 ≈ 7.07 square meters. If you know the diameter rather than the radius, divide by 2 before squaring, or use the equivalent formula Area = π × (Diameter ÷ 2)².

Trapezoid

A trapezoid has two parallel sides of different lengths and a perpendicular height connecting them. Trapezoidal areas appear in plots of land that widen or narrow, road cross-sections, and architectural floor plans with angled walls.

Area = ((Side A + Side B) ÷ 2) × Height

A trapezoidal garden plot with parallel sides of 8 meters and 5 meters, separated by a perpendicular height of 6 meters, has an area of ((8 + 5) ÷ 2) × 6 = 6.5 × 6 = 39 square meters.

L-Shaped Room

L-shaped rooms are among the most common irregular shapes in residential buildings. The calculation splits the L into two rectangles, calculates each area separately, and adds them together. The key is identifying where to draw the dividing line and measuring each sub-rectangle correctly. Different ways of dividing the same L-shape produce the same total area when measured accurately. The calculator accepts all six dimensions of the L and performs the split automatically.

 

Unit Conversions — Working With Non-Metric Measurements

Many practical projects involve measurements in feet, inches, or yards rather than meters. The calculator accepts input in any unit and converts automatically, but understanding the conversion factors helps you check results and avoid errors when working from mixed-unit source material.

From Unit To Square Meters Multiply By Example
Square feet (ft²) 0.0929 200 ft² × 0.0929 = 18.58 m²
Square yards (yd²) 0.8361 50 yd² × 0.8361 = 41.81 m²
Square inches (in²) 0.000645 500 in² × 0.000645 = 0.32 m²
Square centimeters (cm²) 0.0001 15,000 cm² × 0.0001 = 1.5 m²
Acres 4046.86 0.5 acres × 4046.86 = 2,023 m²
Hectares 10,000 2.5 ha × 10,000 = 25,000 m²
Square feet 10.7639 30 m² × 10.7639 = 322.9 ft²
Square yards 1.1960 30 m² × 1.1960 = 35.88 yd²

 

When measuring in feet and inches — for example, a room that is 12 feet 6 inches by 10 feet 3 inches — convert inches to decimal feet before multiplying: 12 feet 6 inches equals 12.5 feet, and 10 feet 3 inches equals 10.25 feet. The area in square feet is 12.5 × 10.25 = 128.125 ft². Multiply by 0.0929 to get 11.90 m². Skipping this conversion step and treating 12.6 × 10.3 as though the digits after the decimal point are fractions of a foot rather than inches is one of the most common calculation errors in practice.

 

How to Use the Square Meter Calculator — Step by Step

Step 1: Select Your Shape

Choose the shape that best matches the area you are measuring from the shape selector: rectangle, square, triangle, circle, trapezoid, or L-shape. If your space is an irregular shape that does not match any of these, divide it into recognizable sub-shapes, calculate each separately, and add the results. The multi-area section of the calculator lets you add multiple shapes together and receive a combined total.

Step 2: Choose Your Input Unit

Select the unit your tape measure or blueprint uses: meters, centimeters, millimeters, feet, or yards. You do not need to pre-convert your measurements — the calculator handles conversion internally. All results are displayed in square meters with the equivalent in square feet shown alongside for reference.

Step 3: Enter Your Dimensions

Enter length, width, radius, height, or whichever dimensions your selected shape requires. Measure to the nearest centimeter or quarter-inch for practical purposes. For flooring calculations, measure the longest dimension of the room in each direction, including any alcoves or bay windows you want to cover. Do not subtract doorways or other small openings — the material will be needed to cover the full rectangle and trimmed on-site.

Step 4: Apply Waste Factor for Material Projects

For flooring, tiling, and similar material projects, always add a waste allowance to the calculated area. Cuts at edges, pattern matching, and breakages all reduce the usable yield of purchased material. Standard waste factors vary by material and layout as shown in the table below. Enter the waste percentage in the calculator and it adds the allowance automatically, showing you both the net area and the gross area to purchase.

Material / Application Recommended Waste Factor Reason
Ceramic or porcelain tiles (straight lay) 10% Edge cuts and breakage
Ceramic or porcelain tiles (diagonal lay) 15% More cuts at every edge
Hardwood flooring (parallel to walls) 7–10% End cuts and defects
Hardwood flooring (diagonal lay) 12–15% Significantly more waste cuts
Laminate or click-lock flooring 7–10% End joints and starter rows
Carpet (broadloom) 10–15% Seam placement and pile direction
Luxury vinyl planks (LVP) 5–7% Minimal waste, clean cuts
Natural stone tiles 15–20% High breakage risk, matching veins
Wall paint (two coats) 5–10% Overlap, touch-ups, irregular surfaces
Garden turf / sod 5–10% Shaping edges and joins

 

Step 5: Read Your Results and Cost Estimate

The calculator returns the net area in square meters, the gross area with waste factor included, the equivalent in square feet, and — if you enter a price per square meter — the estimated total material cost. The cost estimate uses the gross area so it accounts for the material you will purchase including waste. Always obtain actual supplier quotes for final budgeting, as prices vary by brand, grade, and region.

 

Square Meter Calculation Examples

Example 1: Rectangular Living Room Floor

A homeowner wants to install hardwood flooring in a living room measuring 6.4 meters by 4.2 meters. They are laying the planks parallel to the longer wall and want to apply a 10% waste factor.

 

Step Calculation Result
Net area 6.4 m × 4.2 m 26.88 m²
Waste allowance (10%) 26.88 × 0.10 2.69 m²
Gross area to purchase 26.88 + 2.69 29.57 m²
Round up to nearest pack Packs typically 2.0 m² each 15 packs (30.0 m²)
Cost at £45/m² 29.57 × £45 £1,330.65 estimated

 

Example 2: L-Shaped Kitchen and Dining Area

A kitchen-diner is L-shaped. The main kitchen section measures 5.0 meters by 4.0 meters. The dining extension adds 3.5 meters by 2.5 meters. The homeowner needs ceramic floor tiles laid in a straight pattern with a 10% waste factor.

 

Step Calculation Result
Kitchen section area 5.0 m × 4.0 m 20.00 m²
Dining extension area 3.5 m × 2.5 m 8.75 m²
Combined net area 20.00 + 8.75 28.75 m²
Waste allowance (10%) 28.75 × 0.10 2.875 m²
Gross area to purchase 28.75 + 2.875 31.63 m²
Order quantity Round to nearest box 32 m² ordered

 

Example 3: Circular Garden Feature

A garden designer is laying artificial turf in a circular seating area with a diameter of 5.0 meters. They apply a 10% waste factor for shaping edges.

Radius = 5.0 ÷ 2 = 2.5 m

Area = π × 2.5² = 3.14159 × 6.25 = 19.63 m²

With 10% waste: 19.63 × 1.10 = 21.60 m² to purchase

 

Room Size Benchmarks — What Square Meters Mean in Practice

Square meter figures become intuitive with reference points. The following benchmarks help you verify that your calculations produce sensible results and give context to property listings or planning specifications.

Space Typical Area (m²) Equivalent in ft² Notes
UK single bedroom (minimum) 7.0 m² 75 ft² Building Regs minimum
UK double bedroom (typical) 11–14 m² 118–151 ft² Standard new-build size
Living room (small flat) 16–20 m² 172–215 ft² Comfortable for 2 people
Living room (family home) 25–35 m² 269–377 ft² Open-plan sizes
Kitchen (standard) 8–12 m² 86–129 ft² Galley to medium kitchen
UK studio flat 25–35 m² 269–377 ft² All-in-one living space
UK one-bed flat 40–50 m² 430–538 ft² Typical new-build
UK family home (3-bed) 85–110 m² 915–1,184 ft² Average semi-detached
Tennis court 260 m² 2,799 ft² Standard singles court
Basketball court (NBA) 420 m² 4,520 ft² Full regulation court
Football pitch (FIFA) 7,140 m² 76,854 ft² Standard 105 × 68 m

 

These benchmarks are useful when reviewing property listings, planning room layouts, or checking that a quoted area sounds reasonable. A living room described as 40 square meters in a standard house would be exceptionally large — a number that large might indicate an error in the listing or that the combined open-plan space has been described. Similarly, a bedroom of 5 square meters is below UK building regulations minimum and would be a legal compliance issue in new construction.

 

Common Applications of Square Meter Calculations

Flooring and Tiling

Flooring is the most frequent practical use of square meter calculation. Every room must be measured, a waste factor applied, and the result rounded up to the nearest full pack or roll. Tiles come in boxes with a fixed coverage per box — commonly 1.0 m², 1.44 m², or 2.0 m² — so the gross area determines how many boxes to buy. Buying too few means a mid-project trip to the supplier with the risk that the next batch has a slightly different shade. Buying too many wastes money. Accurate area calculation directly controls cost.

Paint and Wall Coverings

Paint coverage is rated in square meters per liter. Standard interior emulsions cover approximately 12–15 m² per liter for one coat on a smooth, primed surface. Textured or porous surfaces reduce coverage to 8–10 m² per liter. Calculate the area of each wall by multiplying height by width, subtract large windows and doors, add the areas of all four walls, and divide by the coverage rate to find litres needed per coat. Multiply by two for two coats. A typical 4 m × 3.5 m room with 2.4 m ceilings has a wall area of approximately 36 m², requiring around 3 litres per coat or 6 litres for two coats.

Garden and Landscaping

Turf, gravel, bark mulch, topsoil, and paving slabs are all sold by the square meter or priced per square meter for installation. Garden beds, lawns, patios, and paths need accurate area calculations to order the right quantities. Irregular garden shapes are handled by the multi-shape feature — divide the space into triangles, rectangles, and partial circles and sum the areas. For gravel and mulch, depth also matters: multiply the area in square meters by the depth in meters to get volume in cubic meters, then convert to tonnes using the material density.

Property and Real Estate

Property size is listed in square meters in most countries, and price per square meter is a key metric for comparing properties. Gross internal area (GIA) includes all internal floor space. Net internal area (NIA) subtracts structural walls, circulation space, and service areas. When comparing listings, always check which measurement basis is used — GIA figures appear larger than NIA for the same physical property. Calculating the floor area of each room and summing them gives you an independent check of any listed figure.

Construction and Building Projects

Concrete slabs, screed, insulation boards, roofing felt, damp proof membrane, and plasterboard are all specified and ordered in square meters. A concrete slab requires both area and depth to calculate volume — multiply the area in square meters by the slab thickness in meters to get cubic meters of concrete. For a 6 m × 5 m slab at 150 mm depth: 30 m² × 0.15 m = 4.5 m³ of concrete. The calculator handles the area computation and links directly to the concrete volume estimator for complete material take-off.

 

Working From Scale Drawings and Blueprints

Architects and engineers produce drawings at a stated scale — commonly 1:50, 1:100, or 1:200 — meaning that 1 centimeter on paper represents 50, 100, or 200 centimeters in reality. Reading area from a scale drawing requires converting the drawing dimensions to real-world dimensions before calculating area.

The scale calculator accepts a measurement taken from a drawing in centimeters, the scale ratio, and the unit you want the real-world answer in. If a room measures 5.2 cm on a 1:100 drawing, the real-world length is 5.2 × 100 = 520 cm = 5.20 meters. A width of 3.8 cm on the same drawing equals 3.8 × 100 = 380 cm = 3.80 meters. The floor area is 5.20 × 3.80 = 19.76 m².

Common drawing scales and what 1 cm on paper represents in reality are shown below.

Drawing Scale 1 cm on Paper Equals Common Use
1:10 10 cm (0.1 m) Detail drawings, joinery
1:20 20 cm (0.2 m) Construction details
1:50 50 cm (0.5 m) Floor plans, small buildings
1:100 1 m Standard architectural floor plans
1:200 2 m Site plans, larger buildings
1:500 5 m Urban planning, site layout
1:1250 12.5 m Ordnance Survey large-scale maps
1:2500 25 m Ordnance Survey standard maps

 

Common Square Meter Calculation Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Confusing Linear Meters With Square Meters

Linear meters measure length along a single line. Square meters measure area across two dimensions. A skirting board order uses linear meters. A floor tile order uses square meters. Mixing these up — ordering 20 linear meters of tile when you meant 20 square meters — produces a completely wrong quantity. Always confirm with your supplier whether a product is priced and sold per linear meter or per square meter.

Mistake 2: Forgetting the Waste Factor

Ordering exactly the net area of flooring or tiles will leave you short on every project because material is wasted in cutting. A 10% waste factor is the minimum for standard straight-lay installations. Diagonal layouts, complex rooms, and natural stone require 15–20%. The result of skipping the waste factor is a second delivery, potential batch mismatch in colour or shade, and delay to the project.

Mistake 3: Mixing Units Within a Calculation

Multiplying a length in meters by a width in centimeters produces a result in meter-centimeters, not square meters. Before any multiplication, all dimensions must be in the same unit. The calculator enforces consistent units automatically, but manual calculations are vulnerable to this error. If your tape measure shows 4 m 35 cm, convert to 4.35 m before using the figure in a formula.

Mistake 4: Measuring Sloped or Curved Surfaces as Flat

A sloped roof measured by its horizontal footprint understates the actual roof surface area that needs to be covered with felt, battens, and tiles. Similarly, a curved wall measured at its chord length understates the actual surface area. For sloped roofs, multiply the horizontal footprint by a pitch factor. For curved surfaces, use the arc length rather than the straight-line distance. The calculator’s circle and sector functions help with curved surface calculations.

Mistake 5: Using the Wrong Formula for the Shape

Applying the rectangle formula (length × width) to a triangular section overestimates area by 100% — it gives twice the correct answer. Applying it to an L-shaped room without splitting the shape also produces an incorrect result. Identify your shape correctly before selecting a formula, and for complex or irregular shapes, always divide into simple recognizable components.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate square meters from feet and inches?

Convert each dimension to decimal feet first: 12 feet 6 inches becomes 12.5 feet, and 9 feet 9 inches becomes 9.75 feet. Multiply the two decimal foot values to get area in square feet: 12.5 × 9.75 = 121.875 ft². Then multiply by 0.0929 to convert to square meters: 121.875 × 0.0929 = 11.32 m². Alternatively, enter feet and inches directly into the calculator and select feet as your input unit — the conversion happens automatically.

What is the difference between m² and m³?

Square meters (m²) measure area — a two-dimensional surface. Cubic meters (m³) measure volume — a three-dimensional space. A floor has area in m². A room full of air has volume in m³. When buying concrete, gravel, topsoil, or mulch, you need volume in m³, which is calculated by multiplying the area in m² by the depth or thickness in meters. A 20 m² patio base at 0.1 m depth requires 20 × 0.1 = 2.0 m³ of compacted base material.

How many square meters is a standard room?

Room sizes vary significantly by country, building age, and housing type. A standard UK double bedroom in a new-build home typically measures 11–14 m². A living room in a mid-sized family home is commonly 20–28 m². A kitchen in a semi-detached house is typically 8–12 m². In older or larger properties, rooms tend to be larger. In city apartments and studio flats, individual rooms may be smaller. These figures are useful sanity checks when reviewing property listings or planning furniture layouts.

How do I calculate square meters for an irregular room?

Divide the room into rectangles, triangles, or other recognizable shapes by drawing imaginary dividing lines. Calculate the area of each section using the appropriate formula. Add all section areas together for the total. For example, an L-shaped room is split into two rectangles. A room with a diagonal wall can be split into a rectangle and a triangle. The multi-area feature of the calculator lets you enter each section separately and automatically sums the total.

How much does 1 square meter of flooring cost?

Flooring costs per square meter vary enormously by material, grade, and brand. Laminate flooring typically ranges from £8–£25 per m². Solid hardwood ranges from £30–£80 per m². Ceramic floor tiles range from £10–£40 per m². Natural stone such as limestone or slate ranges from £30–£100 per m². Luxury vinyl plank (LVP) typically costs £15–£35 per m². These are material costs only — professional installation adds £10–£25 per m² or more depending on the material and complexity. Always request installation quotes separately.

Can I use the calculator for wall area as well as floors?

Yes. Wall area is calculated using the same formulas — height multiplied by width for a rectangular wall. For a full room, calculate each wall separately, subtract the area of windows and doors, and sum the results. This total wall area is what you use to calculate paint quantities, wallpaper quantities, or the number of tiles needed for a splashback or bathroom. The calculator handles each wall as a separate rectangle and lets you combine multiple calculations in the multi-area section.

 

Final Thoughts

Square meter calculation is the foundation of almost every practical building, decorating, and landscaping project. The right area figure determines how much material to buy, what a project will cost, and whether a space meets regulatory or functional requirements. The Square Meter Calculator at Intelligent Calculator makes that calculation instant and error-free for any shape, any unit, and any application — from a single room floor to a complex multi-section garden layout. Enter your dimensions, select your shape, apply your waste factor, and get results you can take directly to your supplier.

Basic Area Calculator
Calculate area for any shape with unit conversion
Rectangle
Circle
Triangle
Trapezoid
Ellipse
Polygon
Please enter valid positive values for all fields.
0
Square Meters (m2)
Your area calculated using the formula for the selected shape, converted precisely from your chosen unit to square meters. This is the standard SI unit for area measurement used globally in real estate and construction.
Shape Visualization & Scale
Enter values to see shape
A = L × W
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Multi-Room Area Calculator
Calculate total floor area across multiple rooms
Room 1
Room 2
Room 3
Room 4
Columns: Room Name | Length (m) | Width (m)
Please enter at least one room with valid dimensions.
0
Total Square Meters
Total combined floor area of all entered rooms in square meters. This represents the full usable floor space of the property for planning, flooring, or valuation purposes.
Room Area Proportion Chart
RoomArea (m2)% of TotalSize
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Average Room Size
Mean area per room helps benchmark against standard residential sizes
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Largest Room
Biggest individual room driving the most floor area usage
Flooring Cost Estimator
Material cost, waste factor and installation budget
Please enter valid positive values for length, width and material cost.
$0
Total Project Cost
Total cost including material, waste allowance and installation charges for the entire floor area. Always purchase extra material per the waste factor to avoid costly mid-project reorders.
Cost Breakdown Waterfall
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Net Area
Actual room area without any waste allowance included
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Area to Purchase
Total material needed including waste factor buffer
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Material Cost
Cost of flooring material only excluding installation
-
Installation Cost
Labour and fitting charges for the entire floor area
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Paint Coverage Calculator
Walls, ceiling, doors, windows and paint coats
Each door approx 1.9 m2
Each window approx 1.4 m2
Typical emulsion covers 10-12 m2 per litre
Please enter valid positive values for length, width and height.
0 L
Total Paint Required
Total paint volume needed for all surfaces including doors and windows deductions and all selected coats. Always round up to the nearest can size and add 10% for touch-ups and future repairs.
Surface Area Breakdown
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Wall Area
Total paintable wall area minus door and window cutouts
-
Ceiling Area
Ceiling square meterage added when ceiling option is selected
-
Total Surface
Sum of all paintable surfaces before coat multiplication
-
Paint Cans (5L)
Estimated number of standard 5-litre tins you need to buy
Tile Quantity Calculator
Floor and wall tiling with grout joints and waste
Please enter valid positive values for room and tile dimensions.
0
Tiles Required
Total tile count including waste factor allowance and grout joint spacing calculations. Always purchase this quantity before starting work to ensure batch-matched tiles for a perfect finish.
Tile Layout Preview (scaled)
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Net Tiles
Tiles needed for the exact area with no waste buffer
-
Waste Buffer
Extra tiles for cuts, breakages and future repairs
-
Area per Tile
Coverage of each individual tile including grout spacing
-
Total Cost
Estimated material cost for all tiles including waste buffer
Land Area Converter
Convert between all major land measurement units
Please enter a valid positive value to convert.
0
Square Meters
Precise conversion of your land area to all major international and regional measurement units. Useful for comparing property listings, legal documents and cross-border real estate transactions.
Scale Reference Comparison
UnitValueCommon Use
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Carpet and Fabric Estimator
Roll width, joins, seams and total material needed
Please enter valid positive values for room dimensions.
0
Linear Metres Required
Length of carpet roll you need to purchase based on room dimensions and selected roll width. This accounts for roll direction and minimises seams for a professional installation result.
Roll Layout Diagram
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Room Area
Actual floor area of the room to be carpeted in m2
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Roll Strips
Number of full roll-width strips needed to cover the room
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Material Waste
Percentage of purchased material that will be trimmed away
-
Total Cost
Estimated carpet material cost based on linear metre price
Property Price Per m2
Evaluate and compare property value by area
Compare with another property (optional)
Please enter valid positive values for price and area.
$0
Price per Square Meter
Cost per square meter is the most reliable way to compare properties of different sizes fairly. A lower price per m2 indicates better value, though location and condition must also be considered.
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Price per ft2
Price per square foot for comparison with US and UK listings
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Area in ft2
Property size converted to square feet for easy reference
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Value Rating
Relative value assessment based on global price benchmarks
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vs Property 2
Difference in price per m2 between the two compared properties
Garden and Lawn Calculator
Grass seed, fertilizer, topsoil and turf quantities
Please enter valid positive values for garden dimensions.
0
Garden Area (m2)
Total garden area calculated with precise quantities for your selected garden product. Application rates are based on standard horticultural guidelines for optimal lawn establishment.
Garden Area Visual & Product Quantities
-
Quantity
Calculated quantity based on standard application rates
-
Bags/Rolls
Number of standard packs or rolls required to complete the job
-
Perimeter
Total border length useful for edging and border planning
-
Application Rate
Recommended product amount per square meter for best results
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Concrete Volume Calculator
Slabs, footings, mix ratio and material quantities
Please enter valid positive values for length, width and depth.
0
Cubic Meters (m3) of Concrete
Total wet concrete volume required for the specified slab dimensions and thickness. Material quantities below are calculated using your selected mix ratio for ordering raw materials.
Mix Proportion Visualization
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Cement (bags)
Number of 50kg cement bags required for the mix ratio selected
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Sand (m3)
Volume of fine aggregate (sharp sand) needed for the mix
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Aggregate (m3)
Volume of coarse aggregate (gravel/stone) needed for the mix
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Approx Weight
Estimated total weight of wet concrete at approx 2400 kg/m3
V = L x W x D
Blueprint Scale Calculator
Convert drawing measurements to real-world dimensions
Please enter a valid drawing measurement value.
0
Real-World Length
Actual real-world dimension converted from blueprint measurement using the selected drawing scale. Enter both length and width on the drawing to also calculate the real-world area in square meters.
Scale Comparison Ruler
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Real Length (m)
Actual length of the feature in real-world meters
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Real Width (m)
Actual width of the feature in real-world meters if entered
-
Real Area (m2)
Calculated real-world area when both dimensions are provided
-
Scale Ratio
Every 1cm on the drawing equals this many real-world meters
Area Scenario Comparison
Compare up to 3 areas side-by-side for best decision
Scenario A
Scenario B
Scenario C (optional)
Please enter valid dimensions for at least two scenarios.
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Largest Area
Side-by-side area comparison of all entered scenarios showing relative size differences. Use this to make informed decisions when choosing between different rooms, plots or layouts.
Area Comparison Chart
This calculator is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Consult a licensed advisor before making decisions.