Millimeters to Feet Converter

From
To
0.003281

1 mm = 0.003281 ft

Quick reference

mmft
10.003281
50.0164
100.0328
500.164
1000.3281
5001.6404
10003.2808

Millimeters (mm) and Feet (ft) are both units of length. Converting between them is a routine task in wiring, plumbing, and architectural detail. This converter applies the exact conversion factor, shows the result instantly, and provides a quick-reference table so you can sanity-check the math at a glance.

Type a value above to see it converted in real time. Tap the swap button if you want to go in the opposite direction.

What is the Millimeters to Feet conversion?

The conversion expresses any quantity measured in millimeters as the equivalent quantity in feet, using a fixed mathematical relationship between the two units. Millimeters comes from the Metric system; Feet comes from the Imperial system. The conversion factor between them was standardised internationally to avoid ambiguity.

One millimeters is equal to 0.003281 feet. Multiply your value by that ratio (or use this calculator) to get the converted figure.

The Millimeters to Feet formula

Feet = Millimeters ÷ 304.8

The formula above is the canonical relationship used in engineering, scientific, and everyday contexts. For length pairs this calculator implements it with full floating-point precision and rounds only at the display step — so a result that looks like "0.032808" is actually the precise calculation, not an approximation.

Worked example: convert 10 mm to ft

  1. Start with the value: 10 mm.
  2. Apply the conversion: result = 10 ÷ 304.8.
  3. Result: 0.032808 ft.

Try other values in the input above — the table below shows the most common multipliers at a glance.

Quick reference table

Millimeters (mm)Feet (ft)
10.003
20.007
50.016
100.033
250.082
500.164
1000.328
2500.82
5001.64
10003.281

How to use this converter

  1. Pick a category — Length, Weight, or Temperature — using the pill selector at the top of the converter.
  2. Choose the source unit in the left dropdown and the target unit in the right dropdown.
  3. Type your value. The result updates instantly. The "1 mm = X ft" ratio under the unit pickers gives you a quick sanity check.
  4. Swap or copy. Tap the arrow between the units to reverse the direction; tap the copy icon to save the result to your clipboard.

Common use cases

The Millimeters to Feet conversion shows up most often in wiring, plumbing, and architectural detail. A few specific scenarios:

  • Real-world reading. Datasheets, manuals, and labels often use the unit system of their country of origin — converting lets you reason about them in your preferred system.
  • Engineering & construction. Building codes, tooling tolerances, and structural specs may mix metric and imperial units; a precise converter avoids costly mistakes.
  • Education. Students working through homework, lab reports, or physics problems use exact factors like this one to verify their algebra.
  • International shopping. Imported clothing, furniture, and equipment frequently list sizes in the opposite system — quickly converting clarifies whether something fits.
  • Health and fitness. Weight tracking, recipe measurements, and fitness goals often need cross-system precision.

More about this conversion

Quick Guide: Change mm into ft

If you work with hardware, logistics, or scientific papers, you’ve likely faced this conversion. Aligning mm to ft values improves workflow when managing templates or automation.

With modern converters, you can skip the math — but it helps to understand what's going on behind the scenes for traceability and verification.

Formula: ft = mm × conversion_ratio

Example: Let’s say you have 25 mm. If 1 mm = Z ft, then 25 × Z = result in ft.

The bottom line

Unit conversion is a small but high-stakes calculation — getting it wrong by a factor of 10 or 1.6 has consequences in engineering, medicine, navigation, and trade. The Millimeters to Feet formula above is the internationally accepted standard; this converter implements it precisely. Bookmark the page if you find yourself doing this conversion often.