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179 cm = 5.87 feet
This is the exact conversion of 179 centimeters into feet. 179 cm is also approximately 5 feet 10.5 inches. Use the calculator below to convert centimeters to feet instantly.
If you’ve typed “179 in feet” into a search bar, you’re probably filling out something that doesn’t leave much room for error: a medical intake form, a fitness app profile, a travel document, or an HR record. The tricky part is that “179” is incomplete until we know the unit, most of the time it means 179 cm, but sometimes people accidentally treat it as inches or even meters.
In this guide, we’ll pin down the correct unit, give the exact conversion of 179 cm in feet, show the manual math (so you can trust the number), and share practical rounding and formatting tips. We’ll also point you to our calculator at feettometerscalculator.com for instant, standardized results you can copy confidently into official fields.
“179” by itself isn’t a height, it’s a number waiting for a unit. In real life, 179 is usually shorthand for 179 centimeters (cm) when people talk about human height. But in a different context, it could mean 179 meters (m), which is… a skyscraper problem, not a height problem.
So when someone asks “179 in feet,” we first confirm whether they mean 179 cm in feet (the common intent) or something else.
You’ll most often see “179” meaning centimeters in:
If the field says “Height (cm)” and you enter 179, you’re in the right place. If it says “Height (ft/in)” or “in,” you’ll need to convert.
Let’s get straight to the conversion most people need.
179 cm ÷ 30.48 = 5.872703… ft
So, 179 cm = 5.8727 ft (rounded to 4 decimals).
First convert to inches: 179 ÷ 2.54 = 70.4724 in.
That’s 5 feet + 10.4724 inches, because 5 ft = 60 in.
Common rounding options:
So a practical, accurate feet-inches answer is:
Different systems expect different precision:
When in doubt, we keep more precision until the final step, then round once.
Manual conversion is useful when you want to verify a calculator result, or when a form forces a specific format.
Use the exact relationship: 1 inch = 2.54 cm.
[
179\text{ cm} \div 2.54 = 70.4724409\text{ in}
]
So, 179 cm = 70.4724 in (rounded).
[
70.4724409\text{ in} \div 12 = 5.8727034\text{ ft}
]
So, 179 cm = 5.872703… ft.
Take the whole feet:
Convert the remainder to inches:
Result:
Reverse it to confirm:
If your reverse conversion lands near 179 cm (tiny differences only from rounding), you’re good.
When we’re in a hurry, we can skip the inches step and go straight from centimeters to feet.
Because 1 ft = 30.48 cm:
[
179\text{ cm} \div 30.48 = 5.8727034\text{ ft}
]
So 179 cm = 5.872703… ft.
To get feet-inches quickly:
That gives 5’10.4724″, which you then round to the format you need (whole inch, 1/4, 1/8, etc.).
Most conversion errors aren’t “math” problems, they’re unit and formatting problems.
This is the biggest one:
We always confirm the input unit before converting.
Using 30.5 cm per foot feels close, but it’s not exact.
That difference can affect downstream rounding (especially if a system converts back).
If we round inches too early (say 70.47 → 70.5), then:
Best practice: keep 4–6 decimals while calculating, then round once at the end.
These are not the same:
If a form uses feet-inches boxes, we enter 5 and 10.5 (or 10), not 5.87 or 5.10.
Conversions matter most when a wrong entry creates a wrong outcome, like a miscomputed BMI or incorrect gear size.
Clinics often compute:
If the form wants ft/in, 179 cm ≈ 5’10 1/2″ is a strong choice when halves are allowed.
Fitness apps may store height in cm but display in ft/in (or vice versa). Consistency helps:
We recommend sticking with one unit internally and converting only for display.
Some portals ask for:
Here precision and correct formatting matter because values may be validated or used across documents.
Height influences:
In these cases, 5’10” vs 5’11” can change a recommendation bracket, so rounding choice should match the brand’s sizing rules.
When you’re comparing heights (or checking if a result “looks right”), nearby values help.
Using the same conversion method:
| Height (cm) | Inches (in) | Feet-Inches (approx) |
|---|---|---|
| 177 | 69.685 | 5’9 11/16″ |
| 178 | 70.079 | 5’10 1/16″ |
| 179 | 70.472 | 5’10 1/2″ |
| 180 | 70.866 | 5’10 7/8″ |
| 181 | 71.260 | 5’11 1/4″ |
Tip: if you need a clean whole-inch entry, 179 cm typically becomes 5’10”.
When accuracy and speed both matter, we use a dedicated calculator that keeps units standardized and results easy to copy.
On Feet to Meters Calculator, we:
This avoids the most common slip: entering 179 as meters or inches.
In height conversions, “179” most commonly means 179 centimeters. Convert cm to feet by dividing by 30.48: 179 ÷ 30.48 = 5.872703… ft. So, 179 in feet is about 5.8727 ft (rounded to four decimals).
To convert 179 cm to feet and inches, first convert to inches: 179 ÷ 2.54 = 70.4724 in. That equals 5 feet (60 inches) plus 10.4724 inches. Rounded for practical use, 179 cm in feet is about 5’10 1/2″.
Errors usually happen because the unit is unclear. 179 cm equals about 5.87 ft, but 179 inches equals 14 ft 11 in—completely different. Another common issue is formatting: 5’10” (feet-inches) is not the same as 5.10 ft (decimal feet).
Match the form’s format. If it requires decimal feet, enter 5.8727 ft (or the precision requested). If it uses separate ft/in fields, enter 5 feet and 10.5 inches (or 10 inches if whole inches only). Avoid entering 5.87 in ft/in boxes.
Since 179 cm is 5 ft 10.4724 in, it rounds to 5’10” to the nearest whole inch (because 10.4724 is closer to 10 than 11). For higher accuracy in sizing or clinical use, many people use 5’10 1/2″ if halves are allowed.
Use the exact relationship 1 ft = 30.48 cm. Divide 179 by 30.48 to get decimal feet: 5.872703… ft. To get feet-inches, keep 5 feet, then multiply the decimal remainder (0.872703…) by 12 to get 10.4724 inches.