Convert Square Decimeter (dm²) to Hectare (ha) instantly.
Square Decimeter to Hectare conversion
1 Square Decimeter (dm²) = 0.000001 Hectare (ha). To convert Square Decimeter to Hectare, multiply the value by 0.000001.
| Square Decimeter (dm²) | Hectare (ha) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.000001 |
| 2 | 0.000002 |
| 5 | 0.000005 |
| 10 | 0.00001 |
| 25 | 0.000025 |
| 50 | 0.00005 |
| 100 | 0.0001 |
| 1000 | 0.001 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Hectare are in one Square Decimeter?
One Square Decimeter (dm²) equals 0.000001 Hectare (ha).
How do I convert Square Decimeter to Hectare?
To convert Square Decimeter to Hectare, multiply the value by 0.000001.
What is 10 Square Decimeter in Hectare?
10 Square Decimeter = 0.00001 Hectare.
About these units
Square Decimeter (dm²)
A square decimeter equals 100 square centimeters or 0.01 square meters. It is used in educational contexts, interior design, textiles, and packaging. Students often learn area concepts using dm² because it bridges the intuitive size of the square meter with the more granular cm². In design fields, dm² helps specify tile surfaces, patterns, laminates, and coverings. Industrial packaging may express surface areas (e.g., of labels or film wrapping) in dm² for regulatory or cost-calculation purposes. It offers a comfortable intermediate scale for everyday applications.
Hectare (ha)
A hectare is equal to 10,000 m², or 0.01 km², and is the standard unit of land measurement in agriculture, forestry, and land management across most of the world. Unlike the acre, which comes from historical English land systems, the hectare is fully metric and integrates cleanly into scientific practice. Farmers use hectares to measure fields, crop yields, irrigation requirements, and livestock capacity. Foresters rely on hectares for forest inventories, timber production estimates, and biodiversity assessments. Urban planners use hectares when describing zoning, green space, and population density. The hectare is the perfect intermediate scale: large enough for meaningful land plots, and small enough to avoid unwieldy numbers when describing farms or urban districts.