LF Calc

Linear Feet to Meters Calculator

By the Linear Feet Calculator Team | Updated June 2026

Convert linear feet to meters and meters to linear feet in a single bidirectional calculator. Whether you're ordering materials from an international supplier, reading construction plans in different unit systems, or shipping to metric countries, this tool uses the exact international conversion factor of 0.3048.

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Linear Feet ↔ Meters (Bidirectional)

1 LF = 0.3048 m

1 m = 3.28084 LF

International Construction Standards: Who Uses What

Understanding unit conventions is essential when sourcing materials or working across borders. Each country has its own mix of official and practical standards.

Country / Region Official System Construction Practice Key Impact
United States Imperial Feet and inches for everything All building codes reference feet/inches
Canada Metric (official) Imperial for residential; metric for gov't projects Government bids require metric; private work uses feet
United Kingdom Metric (official) Mixed: timber in mm, doors in Imperial A 2×4 is called 50×100 mm but actually 47×100 mm
Australia & New Zealand Metric Strictly metric for all construction No Imperial lumber; all dimensions in mm
European Union Metric Metric for all regulated building work Eurocodes exclusively use metric units
Japan Metric + traditional (shaku) Metric for modern; shaku for traditional carpentry 1 shaku = 0.303 m (very close to 1 foot!)
India Metric Metric but feet widely used informally Real estate ads often list both sq ft and sq m

Bidirectional Conversion Table: LF ↔ Meters

A combined table showing both directions using the exact 0.3048 conversion factor.

Linear Feet → Meters Meters → Linear Feet
1 LF 0.3048 m 1 m 3.2808 LF
3 LF 0.9144 m 3 m 9.8425 LF
5 LF 1.5240 m 5 m 16.4042 LF
8 LF 2.4384 m 8 m 26.2467 LF
10 LF 3.0480 m 10 m 32.8084 LF
20 LF 6.0960 m 20 m 65.6168 LF
50 LF 15.2400 m 50 m 164.0420 LF
100 LF 30.4800 m 100 m 328.0840 LF
200 LF 60.9600 m 200 m 656.1680 LF
500 LF 152.4000 m 500 m 1,640.4200 LF

Common Material Sizes in Both LF and Metric

North American building materials and their metric equivalents, essential for cross-border procurement.

Material / Product Imperial Size Metric Equivalent 1 LF in Metric Industry Note
Plywood sheet 4′ × 8′ 1.22 m × 2.44 m 0.305 m Often stocked as 1250×2500 mm
2×4 lumber 1.5" × 3.5" × 8′ 38 × 89 mm × 2.44 m 2.438 m Called "38 by 89" but still sold as 2×4
Standard fence panel 6′ wide × 6′ tall 1.83 m × 1.83 m 1.829 m A 100 LF fence = 30.48 m of fence line
Standard ceiling height 8′ (96") 2.44 m 2.438 m Modern builds often 9′ (2.74 m)
Door height 6′8" (80") 2.03 m 2.032 m European doors typically 2.10 m
Shipping container (20 ft) 20′ × 8′ × 8.5′ 6.10 m × 2.44 m × 2.59 m 6.096 m TEU = Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit

Worked Examples: Linear Feet ↔ Meters in Practice

Scenario Imperial Value Calculation Metric Result Real-World Takeaway
Ordering European pipe for a US job 450 LF of pipe needed 450 × 0.3048 137.16 m Order 138 m; the extra 0.84 m accounts for cuts
Converting a Canadian building spec to US 75 m of baseboard 75 / 0.3048 246.06 LF Order 250 LF (standard packaging rounds up)
Estimating fence from a European lot plan Lot perimeter: 180 m 180 × 3.28084 590.55 LF With 6′ panels: need 99 panels (591÷6), order 100
Exporting US lumber to Australia 1,200 LF of deck boards 1,200 × 0.3048 365.76 m Must be labeled in meters for Australian customs

Common Mistakes When Converting LF to Meters

Mistake #1: Using 0.3 Instead of 0.3048

Rounding 0.3048 to 0.3 introduces a 1.6% error. Across 100 LF, using 0.3 gives you 30.00 m instead of 30.48 m — you're off by 0.48 m (1.57 feet). On a 1,000 LF pipe run, that's 4.8 m (15.7 ft) of error. That's enough to miss a tie-in, require an extra coupling, or get rejected by an inspector. On metric-to-Imperial, the reverse rounding error (using 3.0 instead of 3.28084) is even worse: 8.5% error. Always use the exact factor for anything over 50 LF.

Mistake #2: Confusing Meters With Yards

1 meter = 1.0936 yards. This means 10 meters is NOT 10 yards — it's 10.94 yards, a 9.4% difference. Common scenario: an American contractor sees a European spec calling for "50 m of cable" and mentally translates to "50 yards," ordering 150 LF. But 50 m = 164 LF. They're 14 LF short. Always check whether the spec says "m" (meters) or "yd" (yards).

Mistake #3: Assuming Linear Feet and Linear Meters Are Interchangeable

They're not. A European timber supplier listing "2.50 EUR per linear meter" for decking is charging 2.50 EUR for 3.28 LF of material, which is about 0.76 EUR per LF. Converting per-unit costs requires knowing the conversion factor. To convert price per meter to price per LF: divide by 3.28084. Conversely, price per LF to price per meter: multiply by 3.28084. Getting this wrong can make a material look 3× cheaper or more expensive than it actually is.

Mistake #4: Not Accounting for Material Standard Sizes in the Destination Country

A 4′ × 8′ sheet of plywood (1.22 × 2.44 m) doesn't neatly match European standard 1250 × 2500 mm sheets. Importing North American plywood for a European project means offcuts on every sheet. Similarly, European 2.5 m lengths of lumber (8.2 LF) leave awkward 0.2 LF waste when cut for 8′ US framing. Always check whether the standard sheet/board lengths in the destination country match your project dimensions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many meters are in a linear foot?
1 linear foot = 0.3048 meters, exactly. This is fixed by international agreement (the International Yard and Pound Agreement of 1959). In construction, it's often rounded to 0.305 m for rough estimates, but precise work (structural steel, machine parts, long pipe runs) must use 0.3048. The difference between 0.3 and 0.3048 amounts to 1.6 feet of error across every 100 linear feet — critical for large commercial projects.
Which countries use linear feet vs. meters for construction?
The United States, Liberia, and Myanmar officially use feet/inches. Canada uses metric for government work but Imperial for residential construction (2×4 lumber is called 38×89 mm but sold as 2×4). The UK uses metric officially but Imperial for most building work. Australia and New Zealand use metric exclusively in construction. The EU uses metric for all regulated building. Knowing your target market's system prevents costly material ordering errors.
What is a linear meter?
A linear meter is the metric equivalent of a linear foot — it measures one-dimensional length in meters with no regard to width or thickness. 1 linear meter = 3.28084 linear feet = 39.37 inches. Linear meters are commonly used for fabric (sold per meter in Europe), cable, pipe, and lumber in metric countries. Unlike a square meter (10.764 sq ft of area) or cubic meter (35.315 cubic feet of volume), a linear meter only measures length.
How do I convert back from meters to linear feet?
Divide meters by 0.3048, or multiply by 3.28084. Example: 10 meters = 10 / 0.3048 = 32.81 linear feet. Alternative method: 10 meters × 3.28084 = 32.81 linear feet. Both give the same result. For quick mental math, the rough conversion 1 m ≈ 3.28 ft (or 1 m = 3-1/4 ft) is usually close enough for estimates.

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