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Choosing & Converting Units of Area
Rung 2 of 3 · The method

Converting, and Choosing a Sensible Unit

Two skills, one page: swap between units with the right factor, and pick the unit that gives a tidy number in the first place.


PractiseHit “new conversion”, work it out, then check. Then try the “sensible unit” quiz underneath.
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Video ExplainerComing Soon

Every conversion is the same two questions: which way am I going, and by what factor. Get those two and the rest is just a multiply or a divide.

The Factors Worth Knowing

There are only three steps on the area ladder, and each is the square of its length factor:

mm² ↔ cm²: ×100 or ÷100  (because 1 cm = 10 mm, and 10² = 100)
cm² ↔ m²: ×10 000 or ÷10 000  (because 1 m = 100 cm, and 100² = 10 000)
m² ↔ ha: ×10 000 or ÷10 000  (a hectare is a 100 m × 100 m square)

Which Way: Multiply or Divide?

Going to a smaller unit, you'll need more of them, so you multiply. Going to a bigger unit, you'll need fewer, so you divide. A square metre is a big tile; chop it into little square centimetres and you get loads — 10 000 — so m² → cm² multiplies.

Say it plainly: smaller unit = multiply, bigger unit = divide. And always use the area factor (100, 10 000), never the plain length one.

A Worked One

Convert 3 m² into cm². We're heading to a smaller unit, so multiply. The factor for m² → cm² is 10 000. So 3 × 10 000 = 30 000 cm². Going the other way, 50 000 cm² into m²? Divide: 50 000 ÷ 10 000 = 5 m².

Choosing the Unit in the First Place

Before you convert anything, pick a unit that makes the number friendly. A desk top in cm² (a few thousand), a stamp in mm², a classroom in m², a paddock in hectares. If your number has a silly pile of zeros or a tiny string of decimals, you've probably picked the wrong unit — that's the quiz at the bottom of the toy.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

How do you decide whether a conversion should multiply or divide?

What's a thing at home you'd measure in cm², and one you'd measure in m²?