Square Meter Calculator

Use this Square Meter calculator to calculate the area of rooms, floors, walls, plots, and other surfaces. It works for rectangular, triangular, circular, and trapezoidal shapes. Enter the dimensions for the shape you need, and the calculator returns the area in square feet, square meters, and square yards. You can also enter a quantity to calculate the total area for multiple identical shapes. Whether you are measuring a room for flooring in the USA, a garden plot in the UK, a wall for painting in Europe, or a circular patio in the GCC, this tool helps you calculate the area quickly and accurately. This page also keeps the formula, examples, FAQs, and references close by so you can check the result with confidence.

What This Square Meter Calculator Helps You Do

For a rectangle, multiply length by width. For a triangle, multiply base by height and divide by 2. For a circle, multiply pi by the radius squared. For a trapezoid, add the two bases, multiply by height, and divide by 2. Example: a 12 m by 10 m room has an area of 120 square feet. Review the formula and examples below if you want to see how the result is derived.

This page is meant to give you a fast answer, but it also helps you double-check the math before you make a decision. Start with the inputs that you already know, run the calculation, and then compare the output with the formula, examples, and FAQs below so you can see whether the answer fits the situation you are modeling.

If the result looks off, the usual causes are a unit mismatch, a missing decimal, the wrong scenario, or a value that needs to be entered as a rate instead of a total. The notes on this page are designed to make those checks easy without forcing you to leave the calculator and search for context elsewhere.

  • Use the calculator first for a quick estimate.
  • Use the formula to understand how the result is built.
  • Use the examples to compare common use cases.
  • Use the references when the answer depends on a standard or assumption.

Common Checks

A quick result is useful, but the best result is one that still makes sense when you look at it a second time. If you are comparing scenarios, try changing one input at a time so you can see which variable has the biggest impact on the final answer. That makes it much easier to spot whether the calculation matches your expectations.

It also helps to keep the context of the problem in mind. A calculator can tell you the math, but you still need to decide whether the input represents a total, a rate, an average, or a category-specific assumption. When in doubt, start with a simple example from the page and scale up from there.

  • Check that every unit matches the rest of the problem.
  • Keep rates, totals, and averages separate.
  • Adjust one variable at a time when testing scenarios.
  • Use the smallest realistic input first, then scale upward.

Scenario Planning

This calculator is especially useful when you want a quick answer before you commit time, money, or effort. Try one baseline input set, then change a single number and compare the result so you can see how sensitive the answer is to that variable.

That makes the page useful for more than just arithmetic. It becomes a small decision aid that helps you compare options, test assumptions, and explain the final number with confidence when you need to share it with someone else.

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Result

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Quick Answer: For a rectangle, multiply length by width. For a triangle, multiply base by height and divide by 2. For a circle, multiply pi by the radius squared. For a trapezoid, add the two bases, multiply by height, and divide by 2. Example: a 12 m by 10 m room has an area of 120 square feet. Review the formula and examples below if you want to see how the result is derived.

How to Calculate Square Meter Calculator

  1. Select the shape: Choose the shape that matches your area. Rectangle is the most common for rooms and floors. Triangle is useful for gable ends and diagonal cuts. Circle works for round patios and pools. Trapezoid is useful for irregular shapes.
  2. Enter the dimensions: Provide the dimensions for the selected shape. For rectangles, enter length and width. For triangles, enter base and height. For circles, enter radius. For trapezoids, enter top base, bottom base, and height.
  3. Set the quantity: If you have multiple identical areas, enter the quantity. The calculator multiplies the single-area result by the quantity to give the total area.
  4. Review the area: The calculator returns the area in square feet, square meters, and square yards. Use the unit that matches your material or supplier requirements.

Square Meter Calculator Formula

Rectangle: Area = length x width | Triangle: Area = 0.5 x base x height | Circle: Area = pi x radius2 | Trapezoid: Area = 0.5 x (base1 + base2) x height
Variable Meaning Unit
Length Length of a rectangle m
Width Width of a rectangle m
Base Base of a triangle m
Height Height of a triangle or trapezoid m
Radius Radius of a circle m
Top base Top base of a trapezoid m
Bottom base Bottom base of a trapezoid m

Worked Examples

USA - Living room floor
  • Shape: Rectangle
  • Length: 15 m
  • Width: 12 m
  • Quantity: 1

Result: 180 ft2, about 16.7 m2

A 15 by 12 foot living room has 180 square feet of floor area. This is useful for ordering flooring, carpet, or tile.

UK - Garden plot
  • Shape: Rectangle
  • Length: 5 m
  • Width: 4 m
  • Quantity: 1

Result: 20 m2, about 215 ft2

A 5 by 4 meter garden plot has 20 square meters of area. This is useful for planning planting beds, paths, and lawn areas.

EU - Triangular gable end
  • Shape: Triangle
  • Base: 6 m
  • Height: 3 m
  • Quantity: 2

Result: 18 m2 total, about 194 ft2

Two triangular gable ends with a 6 meter base and 3 meter height have a total area of 18 square meters. This is useful for estimating siding or paint.

GCC - Circular patio
  • Shape: Circle
  • Radius: 3 m
  • Quantity: 1

Result: 28.3 m2, about 304 ft2

A circular patio with a 3 meter radius has about 28.3 square meters of area. This is useful for ordering pavers, concrete, or landscaping materials.

Common Room Sizes

This table shows typical room sizes for residential construction. Use these as a reference when planning flooring, paint, or other area-based materials.

Range Meaning Action
Under 100 ft2 Small room or closet Standard material quantities are usually sufficient. Check material waste allowances.
100 to 300 ft2 Typical bedroom or living room Compare material pricing per square foot versus per unit. Waste allowance matters more at this scale.
300 to 600 ft2 Large room or small apartment Plan the layout carefully to minimize cuts and waste. Consider ordering an extra box or bundle for defects.
Over 600 ft2 Whole house or commercial space Coordinate delivery, staging, and installation sequence. Verify material lot consistency to avoid color or texture variation.
This table shows typical room sizes for residential construction. Use these as a reference when planning flooring, paint, or other area-based materials.
Room Type Typical Size Square Meter Notes
Bedroom 10 x 12 m 120 ft2 Standard bedroom size
Living room 12 x 18 m 216 ft2 Medium living room
Kitchen 10 x 12 m 120 ft2 Standard kitchen
Bathroom 5 x 8 m 40 ft2 Full bathroom
Garage 20 x 20 m 400 ft2 Two-car garage

Frequently Asked Questions

For a rectangle, multiply length by width. For a triangle, multiply base by height and divide by 2. For a circle, multiply pi by the radius squared. For a trapezoid, add the two bases, multiply by height, and divide by 2.

Square feet is an imperial unit of area, while square meters is a metric unit. One square foot equals about 0.0929 square meters. One square meter equals about 10.764 square feet.

Yes. This calculator is commonly used for flooring, carpet, tile, and other area-based materials. Enter the room dimensions and the calculator returns the area in square feet, which you can use to order material.

Yes. For painting, calculate the wall area by multiplying wall length by wall height. Subtract the area of windows and doors if you want a closer estimate. The result is the paintable area in square feet.

Break the irregular shape into simple shapes like rectangles, triangles, and circles. Calculate the area of each shape separately, then add them together. This gives a good approximation of the total area.

Yes. Enter dimensions in meters or feet. The calculator converts the result to both square meters and square feet. Use the unit that matches your material or supplier requirements.

Enter the quantity of identical areas. The calculator multiplies the single-area result by the quantity to give the total area. This is useful for calculating the total area of multiple rooms, walls, or plots.

The calculator is as accurate as the dimensions you enter. For rectangular areas, the result is exact. For irregular shapes, breaking them into simple shapes gives a good approximation. Always measure carefully and add a small waste allowance for material orders.

This calculator is built to give a fast planning estimate, not a final field measurement. Enter the project dimensions, keep the units consistent, and treat the result as a starting point for ordering or budgeting. For Square Meter, it is smart to round up when cuts, fit-up, or supplier packaging could increase the real purchase amount.

The quickest way to use the page is to match your real project measurements to the inputs, then let the formula do the unit conversion for you. If you are estimating Square Meter, check whether the result is meant to be rounded up, especially when the material is sold in standard lengths, panels, bags, or batches.

Most of the accuracy comes from good measurements. If the width, length, depth, or density is off, the result will move with it. For Square Meter, that means measuring the work area carefully and confirming product specs before you place an order.

Yes, metric inputs are usually fine as long as you keep the same unit system throughout the calculation. The key is consistency: do not mix feet with metres or inches with millimetres unless the calculator specifically converts between them. That rule is especially important for Square Meter.

A planning calculator cannot know every site detail, so a small waste allowance is often wise. For Square Meter, waste covers trimming, damage, overlaps, layout changes, or the bits left over after cutting. If your project is complex, use a slightly higher margin.

Rounding depends on what you are buying. If the answer is a count, round up to the next whole item. If it is an area or volume, compare the output to the way your supplier sells materials. For Square Meter, a conservative round-up usually saves time later.

Openings, cutouts, and unusual shapes can change the total a lot. When the calculator offers a way to subtract them, enter them carefully so you do not overbuy. For Square Meter, large holes or interruptions are often worth deducting before adding your waste allowance.

The calculator is useful for comparing materials because it keeps the project math in one place. You can swap in different widths, densities, exposures, or lengths to see how the order changes. That makes Square Meter a practical tool for side-by-side planning.

The result is accurate enough for estimating, pricing, and comparing options, but it should not replace manufacturer instructions or engineering review when the project is structural. For Square Meter, use the output as a planning figure and verify code or product limits separately when needed.

Small measurement changes can have a noticeable effect, especially on large projects. If your numbers are approximate, run a second pass with the next likely size up or down. For Square Meter, that quick sensitivity check helps avoid short orders.

Yes. Many people use the result to estimate cost by multiplying the quantity or area by a unit price from a supplier. For Square Meter, that is often the easiest way to compare quotes before you decide what to buy.

Contractors and DIY users can both benefit from the same calculation because the underlying math is the same. What changes is the level of precision and the amount of waste you choose to carry. For Square Meter, a contractor may use a tighter estimate while a DIYer may prefer a little extra margin.
Planning note: This calculator provides area estimates based on the dimensions you enter. For irregular shapes, break them into simple shapes and add the areas. Always measure carefully and add a small waste allowance for material orders. For large projects, verify the dimensions on site before purchasing materials.

References

Last reviewed: March 2026