Convert lawn area between square feet, square yards, square meters, square kilometers, hectares, acres, cents, and square inches instantly. This 2026-ready lawn area converter helps you read fertilizer labels, grass seed coverage, sod quotes, mulch estimates, sprayer rates, irrigation plans, and international lawn care guides without guessing.
Lawn care in the United States uses square feet and acres as the primary area units. Fertilizer bags, seed packages, herbicides, and pesticides all display coverage in square feet or acres. Most American homeowners have a lawn between 5,000 and 12,000 square feet โ a quarter acre lot is 10,890 sq ft, a half acre is 21,780 sq ft. Knowing your lawn in square feet is essential for buying the correct quantity of any lawn care product.
Metric countries (UK, Australia, Canada, most of Europe) use square meters and hectares. One hectare equals exactly 10,000 square meters โ about the size of a rugby pitch. UK fertilizer labels show rates per 100 sq m or per hectare. A typical UK garden runs 50โ200 square meters. Converting between systems is essential when using products from different regions or following international lawn care guides.
The cent is a land area unit used in South Asia (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh) equal to 1/100th of an acre or 435.6 square feet. It is commonly used in rural property and land sales in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and parts of South Asia. The square yard remains common in the US for smaller areas like garden beds, patios, and paving projects.
Walk the length and width of your lawn in feet and multiply. For irregular shapes, break the lawn into rectangles and add areas together. Alternatively, use Google Earth or Google Maps satellite view โ right-click your lawn boundary and select "Measure distance" to trace the perimeter. Most smartphones also have built-in measurement apps. Once you have square footage, use this converter to get the unit needed for your product label.
| Unit | = Sq Ft | = Sq Meters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 sq inch | 0.00694 | 0.000645 |
| 1 sq foot | 1.0 | 0.0929 |
| 1 sq yard | 9.0 | 0.836 |
| 1 sq meter | 10.764 | 1.0 |
| 1 cent | 435.6 | 40.47 |
| 1 acre | 43,560 | 4,047 |
| 1 hectare | 107,639 | 10,000 |
| 1 sq km | 10,763,910 | 1,000,000 |
| Lawn Type | Sq Ft | Acres |
|---|---|---|
| Townhouse / condo | 500โ2,000 | 0.01โ0.046 |
| City row house | 2,000โ4,000 | 0.046โ0.092 |
| Average suburban | 5,000โ12,000 | 0.11โ0.28 |
| Quarter acre lot | 10,890 | 0.25 |
| Half acre lot | 21,780 | 0.50 |
| 1 acre property | 43,560 | 1.0 |
| Rural / estate | 87,120+ | 2.0+ |
| Garden Size | Sq Meters | Sq Ft |
|---|---|---|
| Small UK garden | 20โ50 sq m | 215โ538 |
| Average UK garden | 50โ200 sq m | 538โ2,153 |
| Large UK garden | 200โ500 sq m | 2,153โ5,382 |
| 1 tennis court | 261 sq m | 2,808 |
| 1 football pitch | ~7,140 sq m | ~76,849 |
| 1 hectare | 10,000 sq m | 107,639 |
Most lawn mistakes start with a wrong area number. A homeowner might know the whole property is a quarter acre, but the actual turf area may be much smaller after subtracting the house, driveway, patio, pool, garden beds, shed, and tree islands. If a fertilizer bag covers 5,000 square feet and your true turf area is 7,800 square feet, buying one bag under-applies the lawn by more than one third. If your lawn is only 3,200 square feet and you spread a full 5,000-square-foot bag at the highest setting, you may over-apply nitrogen and increase the risk of burn, disease, and runoff.
This is why the best lawn care workflow is simple: measure the turf-only area first, convert it to the unit shown on the product label, then calculate the rate before buying. Square feet are the most useful daily unit for US lawns. Acres are useful for large properties, sprayer labels, and professional quotes. Square meters are useful for UK, European, Canadian, Australian, and international product labels. Hectares are usually used for agricultural or large commercial turf rates. Cents are useful for South Asian land measurements where plots are commonly sold as 5, 10, or 20 cents.
For lawn seed, square footage controls the number of pounds needed. For sod, it controls the number of rolls, slabs, pallets, or square yards. For fertilizer, it controls pounds of product and pounds of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet. For mulch and compost, it controls cubic yards after you add depth. For sprayers, it controls total gallons of carrier water and the amount of herbicide, fungicide, or insecticide mixed into the tank. The same measured area supports every calculator on LawnsCal, so saving one accurate number can prevent repeated mistakes across the entire season.
First, measure the turf-only area. Second, convert that area into the unit used by the label. Third, multiply by the label rate and round only at the end. Rounding too early is a common reason homeowners buy too much or too little seed, fertilizer, sod, or herbicide.
A 10,000-square-foot lot does not mean you have 10,000 square feet of grass. The structure, driveway, hardscape, planting beds, and non-turf areas must be subtracted. For many suburban homes, turf area is only 40โ70% of total lot size.
| Task | Best Unit | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Grass seed | Sq ft / 1,000 sq ft | Seed rates are usually listed per 1,000 sq ft. |
| Fertilizer | Sq ft / acre | Nitrogen rates depend on area and NPK percentage. |
| Sod | Sq ft / sq yd | Suppliers may quote either unit. |
| Mulch | Sq ft + depth | Area becomes cubic yards after depth is added. |
| Sprayer calibration | Sq ft / acre | Labels often use GPA or oz per 1,000 sq ft. |
| Metric products | Sq m / hectare | Needed for UK, EU, Canada, and Australia labels. |
| Area Type | Formula |
|---|---|
| Rectangle | Length ร width |
| Triangle | Base ร height รท 2 |
| Circle | 3.1416 ร radiusยฒ |
| Oval | 3.1416 ร half length ร half width |
| Irregular lawn | Break into rectangles + triangles, then add |
| Subtract hardscape | Total measured area โ house โ driveway โ beds |
Use these examples to check your own math before buying seed, fertilizer, sod, compost, mulch, or liquid lawn products.
For a fast estimate, length times width is enough. For a reliable product purchase, separate the lawn into sections. A front yard, side strip, back lawn, curb strip, and tree island may each need separate measurements. Measure the longest length and average width of each section, then add the pieces. When a section curves, measure the widest and narrowest width, average them, and multiply by the length. This gives a practical lawn-care estimate even if the shape is not perfectly geometric.
For high-cost projects such as sod installation, hydroseeding, irrigation installation, or professional lawn renovation, add a small waste factor. Sod often needs 5โ10% extra for cuts, seams, curves, and damage. Seed and fertilizer do not need as much extra, but irregular lawns can still benefit from a 5% buffer. Mulch and compost need a depth calculation after area conversion, so a 10% buffer is common for uneven beds and edges. Sprayer applications should not receive a โbufferโ because chemical labels must be followed exactly; instead, calibrate the sprayer and mix the correct amount for the measured area.
For best results, keep one master lawn measurement sheet and update it whenever you add a patio, widen a driveway, install garden beds, remove turf, or expand irrigation coverage. Lawn area changes over time, and old measurements can quietly make every future seed, fertilizer, herbicide, sod, compost, and mulch calculation less accurate.
Your total property area, turf area, treatment area, irrigated area, and renovation area may all be different. A quarter-acre property may have only 6,500 square feet of turf. A 6,500-square-foot turf area may have only 4,200 square feet that needs overseeding. A herbicide application may exclude vegetable beds, tree rings, and drainage swales. A sprinkler system may cover only the irrigated zone. This converter helps you translate each project area into the correct label unit instead of assuming one number works for every job.
| Project | Round How? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Fertilizer bags | Round up to full bag | You cannot buy partial retail bags. |
| Grass seed | Round up 5โ10% | Allows overlap and touch-ups. |
| Sod | Add 5โ10% | Needed for cutting and curves. |
| Mulch/compost | Add 10% | Compensates for settling and uneven edges. |
| Herbicide | Do not round up rate | Follow label exactly to avoid damage. |
| Irrigation | Use actual zones | Coverage area changes by sprinkler zone. |
The converter uses 1 acre = 43,560 square feet, 1 square yard = 9 square feet, 1 square meter = 10.76391 square feet, 1 hectare = 10,000 square meters, and 1 cent = 435.6 square feet. These are fixed measurement relationships, so they do not change year to year.
This converter helps you calculate area, but pesticide and herbicide rates must always follow the product label. If a label specifies a different carrier volume, rate limit, turf restriction, or temperature limit, use the label instructions.
When you compare lawn care quotes, make sure every contractor is talking about the same measured area. One company may price mowing by total lot size, another may price only the turf area, and a third may price by time because slopes, gates, obstacles, and trimming edges change the labor. A 7,000-square-foot flat rectangle is easier to mow, spray, and seed than a 7,000-square-foot yard broken into five narrow sections with trees, drainage ditches, and landscape borders. Area is the starting point, but project complexity still affects the final price.
For materials, however, area math is much stricter. A 50-pound bag of grass seed does not care whether the lawn is easy or hard to access; it still covers a fixed number of square feet at the label rate. A pallet of sod still covers a fixed amount. A fertilizer spreader setting still assumes a specific product coverage. If you are comparing DIY cost against professional service, convert everything back to cost per 1,000 square feet. This one metric makes seed, sod, fertilizer, aeration, mowing, and weed-control estimates much easier to compare fairly.
Use this simple formula: cost per 1,000 sq ft = total project cost รท lawn square feet ร 1,000. For example, if a lawn treatment quote is $180 for an 8,000-square-foot lawn, the cost is $22.50 per 1,000 square feet. If another quote is $225 but includes a 12,000-square-foot treatment area, it is $18.75 per 1,000 square feet and may actually be cheaper on a unit basis. This is especially helpful when comparing professional lawn care companies, sod suppliers, aeration services, mulch delivery, and renovation packages.
Keep a small note with your front lawn area, back lawn area, side lawn area, total turf area, irrigated area, and garden bed area. You can reuse these numbers for every calculator and every quote instead of measuring from scratch each time.
| Quote Type | Normalize To | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Mowing | Cost per visit + turf sq ft | Obstacles and trimming also matter. |
| Fertilization | Cost per 1,000 sq ft | Products are applied by area. |
| Weed control | Cost per 1,000 sq ft | Label rates depend on coverage area. |
| Aeration | Cost per 1,000 sq ft | Larger lawns usually lower unit price. |
| Sod | Cost per sq ft or sq yd | Delivery and installation can vary. |
| Mulch | Cost per cubic yard | Area plus depth determines volume. |
| Saved Number | Used For |
|---|---|
| Total turf sq ft | Fertilizer, weed control, mowing quote |
| Front lawn sq ft | Curb appeal renovation or partial treatment |
| Back lawn sq ft | Pet damage repair, overseeding, irrigation |
| Garden bed sq ft | Mulch, compost, landscape fabric |
| Irrigated sq ft | Sprinkler runtime and water cost |
| Bare patch sq ft | Spot seed, topsoil, starter fertilizer |
This page is built to answer the different ways homeowners, contractors, and international users search for lawn area conversions.
Useful for fertilizer bags, sprayer labels, large yards, mowing quotes, and comparing property sizes.
Useful when using UK, EU, Canadian, Australian, or metric product labels on a US-sized lawn.
Common for sod, turf rolls, paving, landscaping materials, and contractor estimates.
Helpful for large properties, farms, fields, sports turf, international land records, and agricultural labels.
Helpful for South Asian property measurements where small residential land parcels are sold in cents.
Includes dimension-based area calculation so users can enter length and width before converting units.
Common questions about lawn area units, conversions, and how to read product labels correctly.
Grass seed, sod, compost, mulch, hydroseeding, treatment cost, and 50+ more free tools.
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