Foot to Kilometer

ft

1 ft

km

0.0003048 km

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Quick Reference Table (Foot to Kilometer)

Foot (ft)Kilometer (km)
10.0003048
30.0009144
50.001524
60.0018288
100.003048
1000.03048

About Foot (ft)

A foot (ft) is a unit of length in the imperial and US customary systems, defined as exactly 12 inches or 0.3048 meters. It is the primary unit for human height in the United States and the global standard for altitude in aviation — aircraft worldwide report altitude in feet. Construction lumber dimensions, room sizes, and ceiling heights in the US are nearly always specified in feet and inches. One foot is also the basis for the nautical fathom (6 feet).

An average adult male is about 5 feet 9 inches tall. A standard residential ceiling is 8 feet high. Commercial aircraft cruise at around 35,000 feet.

Etymology: Named after the human foot. Old English "fōt" traces to Proto-Germanic "fōts", cognate with Latin "pes" and Greek "pous" — all meaning foot.

About Kilometer (km)

A kilometer (km) is one thousand meters and the standard unit for road distances, geographic measurements, and overland travel in most countries worldwide. It is universally used in science for large-scale terrestrial distances and appears on road signs, weather reports, and maps across Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas. The altitude of mountains, the length of rivers, and the range of aircraft are almost always expressed in kilometers outside the United States.

A comfortable walking pace covers about 1 km in 10–12 minutes. The marathon distance is 42.195 km. Mount Everest rises 8.849 km above sea level.

Etymology: From Greek "khilioi" (thousand) + "metron" (measure). The prefix kilo- denotes 10³ in the SI system.


Foot – Frequently Asked Questions

A foot is exactly 12 inches or 0.3048 meters — about the length of a standard 30 cm ruler. An average adult male foot is close to, but not exactly, one foot (typically 10–11 inches).

Exactly 5,280 feet equal one mile. There are 3 feet in a yard, 6 feet in a fathom, and 660 feet in a furlong. The 5,280 number originates from 8 furlongs of 660 feet — a historical land measurement system.

A "2×4" starts as a rough-sawn board measuring 2 inches by 4 inches. After kiln-drying and planing smooth, it shrinks to 1.5 × 3.5 inches. The lumber industry kept the nominal (pre-planing) names because sawmills had used them for over a century. A 2×6 is really 1.5 × 5.5 inches, a 2×8 is 1.5 × 7.25 inches, and so on. The convention frustrates DIYers but is so deeply embedded in building codes and construction practice that changing it would require rewriting thousands of structural engineering tables.

The US retained imperial units after independence from Britain, and feet-and-inches became culturally entrenched in medical records, sports statistics, and everyday conversation. Metric countries typically express height as a single centimeter number — "175 cm" — which is simpler than "5 feet 9 inches." The US has no legal requirement to switch, so the convention remains unchanged.

The international foot (used everywhere) is exactly 0.3048 meters. The US survey foot is slightly different: exactly 1200/3937 meters ≈ 0.30480061 meters. The difference is about 2 parts per million — negligible for most purposes, but detectable over long surveying distances. The US survey foot was officially retired in 2023; the international foot is now the US legal standard for all purposes.

Kilometer – Frequently Asked Questions

A kilometer is 1,000 meters, approximately 0.6214 miles. At a comfortable walking pace of 5 km/h, you cover one kilometer in roughly 12 minutes. A 10-minute running pace covers about 1 km every 6 minutes.

One mile equals approximately 1.60934 kilometers. Conversely, 1 kilometer equals about 0.6214 miles. For quick mental conversion, 5 miles ≈ 8 km and 8 km ≈ 5 miles is a useful approximation.

Almost every country uses kilometers, including all of Europe, most of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The United States and UK still primarily use miles on road signs and speed limits. Myanmar and Liberia also historically used miles but have been transitioning to metric.

Despite a 1975 Metric Conversion Act, Congress made metrication voluntary rather than mandatory. Public and industry resistance meant road signs, car speedometers, and everyday conventions never changed. The cost and disruption of replacing nationwide road signage and re-educating drivers was judged too high without legal compulsion. The US is now one of three countries that does not use the metric system as its primary everyday standard.

Multiply km by 5, then divide by 8. Example: 80 km × 5 = 400 ÷ 8 = 50 miles. This works because 1 km ≈ 0.625 miles and 5/8 = 0.625 exactly. The true factor is 0.6214, so this approximation is accurate to within about 0.2%.

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