Convert acres to hectares, square metres, square feet and square miles instantly. Fully bidirectional.
Last updated: February 2026
Land Area Converter
Hectares
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Acres
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Square Metres
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Square Feet
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Key Conversion: 1 Acre in Hectares
1 acre = 0.404686 hectares = 4,046.86 m² = 43,560 ft². Conversely, 1 hectare = 2.47105 acres. The average UK farm is approximately 87 hectares (215 acres).
How to Convert Acres to Hectares
The conversion between acres and hectares is straightforward: multiply the number of acres by 0.404686 to get hectares. To convert in the opposite direction, multiply hectares by 2.47105.
The United Kingdom presents a fascinating dual-system approach to land measurement. Land Registry documents, DEFRA agricultural surveys, and planning applications all use hectares and square metres as the official metric units. However, the British countryside runs on acres. Rural property listings, agricultural land sales, shooting estates, and horse paddocks are almost universally advertised in acres.
UK Farm Size Context
According to the DEFRA Farm Structure Survey, the agricultural landscape of the UK breaks down as follows:
Average UK farm: approximately 87 hectares (215 acres)
Small farm (under 20 ha / 49 acres): accounts for ~50% of UK farms by number but only ~5% of land
Large farm (100+ ha / 247+ acres): accounts for ~15% of farms but ~65% of farmland
Largest UK landowner: Forestry Commission with approx. 900,000 hectares (2.2 million acres)
UK total agricultural land: approximately 17.4 million hectares (43 million acres)
How Big is 1 Acre? Real-World Comparisons
Understanding the physical size of an acre helps enormously when evaluating land measurements:
Roughly the area of a standard football pitch (an FA-standard pitch is 0.65–0.80 ha, so 1 acre ≈ 0.76 football pitches)
About the size of a large garden centre
Equivalent to a square with sides of approximately 63.6 metres
Roughly 16 average UK detached houses (with gardens) combined
A typical UK village green is often around 0.5 to 2 acres
Conversion Table: 1 to 100 Acres
The following reference table covers the most commonly encountered land areas in UK rural property and agriculture, from small paddocks to large estates. Key landmark sizes are highlighted.
Acres
Hectares (ha)
Sq Metres (m²)
Sq Feet (ft²)
Sq Miles
History of the Acre: Why the UK Still Uses It
The acre is one of the oldest units of land measurement still in everyday use. Its name derives from the Old English "æcer," meaning open field. Historically, an acre was defined as the amount of land that a yoke of oxen could plough in a single day — roughly a strip of land 1 furlong (220 yards) long and 22 yards wide, giving the familiar 4,840 square yards.
The English acre was standardised in 1878 under the Weights and Measures Act, which fixed it at exactly 4,840 square yards (43,560 square feet). When the UK adopted the metric system in the 1960s and 1970s, acres were retained as a "supplementary unit" for land measurement due to their deep entrenchment in property law, deeds, and rural culture. Unlike many other imperial units (such as the rod, chain, and furlong, which are now rarely used in practice), the acre has proven remarkably resilient.
The Hectare: The Metric Standard
The hectare, introduced as part of the metric system, is defined as 10,000 square metres — equivalent to a square 100 metres on each side. The name comes from the Greek "hekaton" (hundred) combined with "are" (a unit of 100 square metres). The hectare is not technically an SI unit but is accepted for use with the SI system as it appears in the International Bureau of Weights and Measures' table of non-SI units.
In the EU and most of the world, the hectare is the primary unit for measuring agricultural land. EU farm subsidy payments (including historical Common Agricultural Policy payments to UK farmers before Brexit) were calculated per hectare, which is one reason UK farmers need to be comfortable in both acres and hectares.
Post-Brexit Land Measurement in the UK
Since the UK's departure from the European Union, there has been some discussion about reverting to imperial-only measurements in certain contexts. The Agriculture Act 2020, which governs farm support payments under the Environmental Land Management (ELM) schemes, continues to use hectares for area-based payments, as does the Rural Payments Agency (RPA). Planning applications in England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland all specify areas in hectares and square metres.
Using This Acres to Hectares Calculator
This calculator supports four bidirectional input modes:
Acres input: Converts to hectares, square metres, square feet, and square miles simultaneously
Hectares input: Converts to acres and all other units
Square metres input: Converts to acres and hectares
Square miles input: Converts to acres and hectares
All conversions use exact conversion factors: 1 acre = 4,046.8564224 m² (exact), 1 hectare = 10,000 m² (exact). Results are displayed to appropriate decimal places for each unit.
Common UK Land Areas for Reference
Wembley Stadium footprint: approx. 5 acres (2 ha)
Buckingham Palace gardens: 39 acres (15.8 ha)
Hyde Park, London: 350 acres (142 ha)
Lake Windermere: 3,700 acres (1,497 ha)
New Forest National Park: 574,000 acres (232,000 ha)
UK total land area: approx. 60 million acres (24.3 million ha)
Frequently Asked Questions
How many hectares is 1 acre? +
1 acre equals 0.404686 hectares (to 6 decimal places). The exact conversion is 1 acre = 4,046.8564224 m², and since 1 hectare = 10,000 m², we get 4046.8564224 ÷ 10000 = 0.40468564224 hectares exactly.
What is 10 acres in hectares? +
10 acres = 4.047 hectares. Calculation: 10 × 0.404686 = 4.04686 ha. This is roughly the size of a small farm or large country estate paddock in UK rural property terms.
How many square metres in an acre? +
1 acre equals 4,046.86 square metres (4,046.8564224 m² exactly). This is the figure used in Land Registry documents and planning applications in England and Wales.
How do I convert acres to square feet? +
Multiply acres by 43,560 to get square feet. This is an exact conversion. So 5 acres = 5 × 43,560 = 217,800 square feet. This is often used for large commercial property and American real estate.
What is the average UK farm size? +
According to DEFRA data, the average UK farm is approximately 87 hectares (about 215 acres). However, this varies significantly: intensive arable farms in East Anglia may be 500+ acres, while Welsh hill farms often cover 50 acres or fewer of usable land.
How many acres in a hectare? +
1 hectare = 2.47105 acres. So 87 hectares (average UK farm) = 87 × 2.47105 = 214.98 acres, approximately 215 acres.
Does the UK Land Registry use acres or hectares? +
HM Land Registry records areas in hectares on official title register documents. However, estate agents and rural property listings typically advertise land in acres, as this is more familiar to buyers. Planning permission applications use hectares and square metres throughout.
Land measurement specialist at UK Calculator. Conversion factors verified against official BIPM, NIST, and OS National Grid definitions. Learn more about our team.