Convert Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) to Square Rod (US Survey) (rod² (US)) instantly.
Square Foot (US Survey) to Square Rod (US Survey) conversion
1 Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) = 0.0036730946 Square Rod (US Survey) (rod² (US)). To convert Square Foot (US Survey) to Square Rod (US Survey), multiply the value by 0.0036730946.
| Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) | Square Rod (US Survey) (rod² (US)) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.0036730946 |
| 2 | 0.0073461892 |
| 5 | 0.018365473 |
| 10 | 0.036730946 |
| 25 | 0.091827365 |
| 50 | 0.18365473 |
| 100 | 0.36730946 |
| 1000 | 3.6730946 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Square Rod (US Survey) are in one Square Foot (US Survey)?
One Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) equals 0.0036730946 Square Rod (US Survey) (rod² (US)).
How do I convert Square Foot (US Survey) to Square Rod (US Survey)?
To convert Square Foot (US Survey) to Square Rod (US Survey), multiply the value by 0.0036730946.
What is 10 Square Foot (US Survey) in Square Rod (US Survey)?
10 Square Foot (US Survey) = 0.036730946 Square Rod (US Survey).
About these units
Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US))
The US survey square foot is defined using the US survey foot and differs minutely from the international square foot. While the difference is negligible in everyday contexts, in land surveying even tiny discrepancies matter because property boundaries, right-of-way extents, and engineering alignments may accumulate errors over long distances. Surveyors and civil engineers must interpret historical documents using survey-based values to ensure legal consistency with old plats, deeds, and boundary descriptions.
Square Rod (US Survey) (rod² (US))
The US survey square rod is defined using the survey foot and differs negligibly from the international square rod. This distinction matters in legal contexts, especially when interpreting older property descriptions dating back to the 19th-century PLSS-era surveys. The unit persists primarily in legal documents and rural land records, ensuring that historical boundaries remain consistent even as measurement standards evolve.