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Length
Meters to Inches
Convert meters (m) to inches (in). Type a value below to see the result update instantly. Reference table and formula included.
Calculator
1 m = 39.3701 in
Meters to Inches Conversion Table
Common values, ready to copy:
| meters | inches |
|---|---|
| 1 m | 39.3701 in |
| 2 m | 78.7402 in |
| 5 m | 196.85 in |
| 10 m | 393.7 in |
| 25 m | 984.25 in |
| 50 m | 1968.5 in |
| 100 m | 3937.01 in |
| 1,000 m | 39370.08 in |
Formula
inches = meters × 3.93700787e+1
Length conversions use the SI definition: 1 inch is exactly 0.0254 meters and 1 mile is exactly 1,609.344 meters. The factor above is the exact ratio between meter and inch.
About Meters and Inches
Meters (m): The SI base unit of length, originally defined in 1799 as one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole through Paris; since 1983 defined as the distance light travels in vacuum during a precise fraction of a second. Common uses: Athletics (track distances, race lengths), construction, scientific work, and the default length unit for almost any context outside the United States.
Inches (in): From the Latin uncia meaning one-twelfth; originally a thumb-width unit, defined as exactly 2.54 centimeters since the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement. Common uses: US construction, screens and devices, clothing sizes (waist, chest), paper sizes, and a near-universal global unit for TV and monitor diagonals.
How the conversion works
Length conversions use the SI definition: 1 inch is exactly 0.0254 meters and 1 mile is exactly 1,609.344 meters. The factor above is the exact ratio between meter and inch.
The exact relationship is inches = meters × 3.93700787e+1, which the calculator at the top of this page applies in both directions. Type into either field and the other updates immediately.
When this conversion matters
Converting between meters and inches comes up wherever length measurements move between systems — from one country's conventions to another's, from a scientific reference to a practical specification, or from one industry's working unit to another's. The calculator and reference table above cover the everyday range; for unusual values you can type any number into either field.
