Convert Square Meter (m²) to Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) instantly.
Square Meter to Square Foot (US Survey) conversion
1 Square Meter (m²) = 10.763867 Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)). To convert Square Meter to Square Foot (US Survey), multiply the value by 10.763867.
| Square Meter (m²) | Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 10.763867 |
| 2 | 21.527735 |
| 5 | 53.819337 |
| 10 | 107.63867 |
| 25 | 269.09668 |
| 50 | 538.19337 |
| 100 | 1076.3867 |
| 1000 | 10763.867 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Square Foot (US Survey) are in one Square Meter?
One Square Meter (m²) equals 10.763867 Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)).
How do I convert Square Meter to Square Foot (US Survey)?
To convert Square Meter to Square Foot (US Survey), multiply the value by 10.763867.
What is 10 Square Meter in Square Foot (US Survey)?
10 Square Meter = 107.63867 Square Foot (US Survey).
About these units
Square Meter (m²)
The square meter is the SI unit of area and represents the area of a square with sides exactly one meter in length. It is used universally across science, engineering, architecture, real estate, agriculture, and virtually every discipline that deals with two-dimensional space. Because it is derived directly from the meter, it connects seamlessly to other SI units for volume (m³), density (kg/m³), and pressure (Pa = N/m²). In practical contexts, square meters are used to describe the size of rooms, building floor plans, land plots, insulation coverage, and materials such as flooring and roofing. Its intuitive scale makes it ideal for medium-sized spaces. Smaller areas (such as mechanical components) use cm² or mm², while larger geographical spaces use hectares or square kilometers. The square meter's universality and coherence with the metric system make it one of the most important area units in global use.
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 Surveyors and civil engineers must interpret historical documents using survey-based values to ensure legal consistency with old plats, deeds, and boundary descriptions.