Height Conversion Calculators
Enter millimeters below to instantly convert them into feet.
If you’ve ever tried to enter your height (or a measurement from a spec sheet) into a form that only accepts feet, you know how easy it is to end up with a number that looks… wrong. Millimeters (mm) are common in medical notes, product dimensions, and international documents, while feet (ft) show up in US-based forms, building standards, and travel requirements.
In this guide, we’ll convert mm to feet accurately using the exact formula, show the best method for feet-and-inches (the format most height fields expect), and walk through real examples. We’ll also cover rounding rules so you match the precision your form, app, or workplace actually wants, without overthinking it.
Before we convert anything, it helps to remember what each unit is designed for, and why the same “height” can be written so differently depending on the system.
Millimeters are a metric unit used when precision matters. You’ll see mm in:
Because 1 mm is tiny, mm is great for avoiding decimals in metric documents.
Feet are part of the imperial/US customary system. Feet (often paired with inches) are common for:
A small conversion or rounding mistake can cause real friction:
So our goal isn’t just “close enough”, it’s accurate and formatted correctly for the situation.
The cleanest way to convert mm to feet is to anchor everything to one exact relationship.
This is the key fact:
Once we have that, we can convert any mm value to feet reliably.
Here’s the formula we’ll use most often:
feet = millimeters ÷ 304.8
That’s it. If we only memorize one number for mm to feet conversions, 304.8 is the one.
Rounding is useful, but timing matters:
A good rule: keep at least 2–4 decimal places in decimal feet while calculating, then round for final output.
Let’s do the conversion the same way every time: divide by 304.8, then round based on the use case.
Say a height is 1750 mm.
Depending on what we’re filling out:
Suppose a form requires one decimal place in feet, and our measurement is 1682 mm.
Tip: if the form actually expects feet/inches, don’t enter 5.5 ft thinking it means 5 ft 5 in (it doesn’t). We’ll cover this in the ft/in section.
Say a product dimension is 457 mm (common for small equipment sizing).
For smaller measurements, rounding too aggressively can create noticeable percentage error, so we keep a few decimals unless a form forces rounding.
Most height fields in the US want feet and inches, not decimal feet. So we’ll convert mm → decimal feet → inches.
Use:
feet (decimal) = mm ÷ 304.8
Keep several decimals for now.
Take the decimal part of the feet result and multiply by 12.
Now round inches to the nearest whole inch (unless a form asks for halves).
If rounding makes inches equal 12, we carry it:
Let’s convert 1750 mm (from earlier) into ft/in.
Final: 1750 mm ≈ 5 ft 9 in
That’s typically the best format for medical portals, gym profiles, and travel forms that ask for height.
Rounding isn’t about perfection, it’s about matching expectations so the number is usable and accepted.
Common patterns we see:
Our suggestion:
For fitness tracking, consistency beats micro-precision.
Many travel profiles and ID-related systems are strict about input format.
When in doubt, convert to ft/in, it’s the most human-friendly and least ambiguous.
If we’re converting mm to feet for drawings, tolerances, or professional specs:
Rounding too early here can stack errors across multiple dimensions.
If we need speed and consistency (especially across multiple entries), using a dedicated mm to feet converter is the easiest route.
Typically, we enter:
And we should expect outputs like:
Pick the output that matches the field:
Small formatting mistakes cause big confusion. We recommend:
For standardized height conversions with clear explanations, we can use tools on FeetToMetersCalculator.com to generate consistent results quickly.
Quick references are handy when we’re doing repeated checks (students, clinicians, travelers, and builders all do this).
Here are popular heights converted to decimal feet and approximate ft/in (rounded to nearest inch):
| Height (mm) | Feet (decimal) | Feet & Inches (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1500 | 4.9213 ft | 4 ft 11 in |
| 1600 | 5.2493 ft | 5 ft 3 in |
| 1700 | 5.5774 ft | 5 ft 7 in |
| 1800 | 5.9055 ft | 5 ft 11 in |
| 1900 | 6.2336 ft | 6 ft 3 in |
| 2000 | 6.5617 ft | 6 ft 7 in |
A few mm values that pop up in luggage and gear specs:
(For travel, airlines may publish sizes in cm/mm, while a US retailer might list feet/inches, so conversions come up a lot.)
If we’re converting often, it’s worth:
The goal is consistency, especially when multiple people need to enter the same measurements.
When a mm to feet result looks strange, it’s almost always one of a few predictable issues.
This is the classic problem:
If a value seems wildly tall or tiny, we double-check whether the source unit was mm vs cm.
Some people round 304.8 to 305 for mental math. It’s close, but it shifts the result.
Example with 1750 mm:
Difference ≈ 0.0038 ft, which is about 0.046 in. Usually minor, but if we’re stacking calculations or matching strict specs, we should stick with 304.8.
If we round decimal feet too soon, inches can change.
Better approach:
This one causes a lot of form-entry errors:
So 5.5 ft = 5 ft 6 in, not 5 ft 5 in.
When a system shows a single number in feet, we treat it as decimal feet unless it explicitly asks for feet and inches separately.
To convert mm to feet accurately, we rely on one exact relationship: 1 ft = 304.8 mm. For decimal feet, we simply compute mm ÷ 304.8 and round at the end. For height (the most common scenario), we get the cleanest result by converting to feet and inches: decimal feet first, then multiply the decimal part by 12 and round inches properly.
If we want fast, standardized output (decimal feet and ft/in, ready to paste into forms), we can convert instantly on FeetToMetersCalculator.com. It’s a reliable way to avoid rounding mistakes and keep entries consistent across medical forms, fitness profiles, and official documents.
Use the exact conversion factor: 1 ft = 304.8 mm. To convert mm to feet, divide the millimeter value by 304.8 (feet = mm ÷ 304.8). Keep a few decimal places while calculating, then round only at the end to match your form or spec sheet.
First convert mm to decimal feet (mm ÷ 304.8). Take the whole feet, then convert the decimal part to inches by multiplying by 12. Round inches to the nearest whole inch, and if rounding gives 12 inches, carry 1 foot. This avoids common form-entry errors.
Using the mm to feet formula: 1750 ÷ 304.8 ≈ 5.7415 ft, which rounds to 5.74 ft (two decimals). For most height fields, convert to feet and inches: 0.7415 × 12 ≈ 8.898 in, which rounds to 9 in—so about 5 ft 9 in.
It’s usually a formatting or unit mix-up. Common issues include confusing mm with cm (a 10× error), rounding too early before converting to inches, or entering decimal feet into a feet-and-inches field. Also remember: 5.5 ft equals 5 ft 6 in, not 5 ft 5 in.
Round at the end, not during intermediate steps—especially if you’ll convert to inches. For medical or travel forms, use feet-and-inches when available; if a single “ft” field requires decimals, follow its rule (often 1–2 decimals). For engineering specs, keep 3–4+ decimals or stay in mm.
305 is a rough mental-math shortcut, but it’s less accurate than the exact factor (304.8). The difference is small for one conversion, but it can matter for strict specs or repeated calculations. For accurate mm to feet conversions—especially for forms or drawings—use 304.8.