LF Calc

Linear Feet to Square Feet Calculator

By the Linear Feet Calculator Team | Reviewed by our construction experts | Updated June 2026

Linear feet to square feet is one of the most common conversions in construction, home improvement, and material purchasing. If you know the length of a material (in linear feet) and its width, you can calculate the total area it covers in square feet. This is essential for ordering flooring, decking, siding, drywall, and any material sold by the linear foot that covers a surface.

The key concept: linear feet measures length only. Square feet requires width. Without knowing the width of your material, you cannot make this conversion.

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Linear Feet to Square Feet

Convert linear feet to square footage

Linear Feet → Square Feet

Square Feet

Square Feet → Linear Feet

Linear Feet

How to Convert Linear Feet to Square Feet

The formula to convert linear feet to square feet is:

Square Feet = Linear Feet × Width (in feet)

Critical rule: width must be in feet. If your material width is in inches, divide by 12 first. A 6-inch-wide board = 6 / 12 = 0.5 feet. Using inches directly will give wildly incorrect results.

Step-by-Step Worked Examples

Linear Feet Width (in) Width (ft) Square Feet Real-World Use
10 36" 3 30 Roll of 3-ft-wide carpet
20 48" 4 80 4-ft-wide drywall sheets
50 24" 2 100 2-ft-wide roll roofing
100 18" 1.5 150 18-inch-wide siding panels
350 5.5" 0.458 160.4 Deck boards (standard 5/4×6)
480 3.5" 0.292 140 Hardwood floor planks (3.5")

When Do You Need to Convert Linear Feet to Square Feet?

Ordering Flooring

Flooring is priced by the square foot, but individual planks or tiles are measured by their length (linear feet). A box of hardwood flooring might contain 20 linear feet of 3.5-inch-wide planks. Square footage per box = 20 LF × (3.5 / 12) = 5.83 SF. Knowing this conversion lets you compare prices across different plank widths and calculate exactly how many boxes you need for a 200 SF room.

Estimating Paint or Stain Coverage

Paint and stain coverage is rated in square feet per gallon (typically 250–400 SF/gal). If you're painting a fence built from 1×6 pickets (5.5" actual width) spanning 300 linear feet, the surface area is 300 × (5.5/12) = 137.5 SF per side. For both sides: 275 SF. That's approximately one gallon of stain — much less than the 600+ SF you might guess if you forget to convert from linear to square feet.

Siding and Exterior Cladding

Vinyl and fiber cement siding is sold by the box, with each piece having a specific exposure width and length. A box of 12-foot siding panels with a 6-inch exposure covers 6 SF per panel. If your house exterior is 1,500 SF and each box covers 200 SF, you need 8 boxes. Without the LF to SF conversion, you'd either order too little (wasting time and delivery fees) or too much (wasting hundreds of dollars in unused material).

Carpet and Roll Flooring

Carpet is sold in 12-foot and 15-foot wide rolls, priced by the square foot. A 20-linear-foot piece of 12-foot-wide carpet covers 240 SF. But carpet must be installed in one direction (no cross-seams), so a 12×14 room needs two pieces at 14 LF each = 28 LF of carpet, covering 336 SF total (with waste). The LF to SF conversion helps you separate the usable area from the waste and compare installed cost per usable square foot.

Common Material Widths — Quick Reference

Most building materials come in standard widths. Knowing these makes LF-to-SF conversion fast:

Material Typical Width (in) Width (ft) SF per 10 LF Notes
Deck board (5/4×6)5.50.4584.58Standard residential decking
Hardwood flooring3–50.25–0.4172.5–4.17Varies by manufacturer
Drywall sheet484404'×8' standard sheet
Vinyl siding panel6–80.5–0.6675–6.67Exposure width (not total)
Carpet roll144–18012–15120–150Standard roll widths
Roll roofing36330Mineral-surfaced roll

Frequently Asked Questions

How many square feet is 10 linear feet?
It depends on the width. If the width is 3 feet, then 10 linear feet = 30 square feet (10 × 3 = 30). Without knowing the width, you cannot convert linear feet to square feet.
What is the difference between linear feet and square feet?
Linear feet measures length in one dimension (distance). Square feet measures area in two dimensions (length × width). A 10-foot-long board that is 1 foot wide covers 10 square feet.
Can I convert linear feet to square feet for flooring?
Yes. Measure the length (linear feet) of each board and its width. Multiply to get square footage per board. Then multiply by the number of boards needed. Use our calculator above for quick results.
How do I convert square feet back to linear feet?
Divide square feet by the width in feet: Linear Feet = Square Feet / Width. Use our Square Feet to Linear Feet Calculator for this reverse conversion.

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