Centimeters to Feet: The Quick Method, the Inch Trap, and a Cheat Sheet
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters
Most centimeter-to-feet conversions exist for one reason: someone wrote a measurement in metric and someone else needs it in imperial. Heights on medical records, product dimensions on international listings, and measurements in foreign instructions all arrive in centimeters, while feet and inches remain the everyday language for height and room sizes across the United States and United Kingdom. The good news is that the conversion is built on a single exact number, so once you know it, you never have to guess.
That number is 30.48: one foot is defined as exactly 30.48 centimeters. To get decimal feet, divide your centimeter figure by 30.48. So 200 cm divided by 30.48 is about 6.56 feet. Decimal feet are mathematically correct but awkward to picture, which is why the second step matters. Take the part after the decimal point, multiply it by 12, and you have the inches. For 200 cm, the 0.56 becomes about 6.7 inches, giving roughly 6 feet 7 inches, the kind of figure you would actually say out loud.
The single biggest error people make is confusing decimal feet with feet and inches. A height of 5 feet 11 inches is not 5.11 feet. The .11 in 5.11 feet is eleven hundredths of a foot, which is only about 1.3 inches, so 5.11 feet is about 156 cm. Genuine 5 feet 11 inches is about 180 cm, a difference of nearly two and a half centimeters. Whenever a form has a single decimal feet box, do the inch math separately, or use a converter that gives you feet and inches directly.
A few anchor values make mental estimates easy. 152.4 cm is exactly 5 feet. 160 cm is about 5 feet 3 inches, 165 cm is about 5 feet 5 inches, 170 cm is about 5 feet 7 inches, 175 cm is about 5 feet 9 inches, and 180 cm is about 5 feet 11 inches. Notice that each additional 2.5 cm adds roughly an inch. Memorizing just the 5-foot and 6-foot marks lets you sanity-check almost any height conversion in your head before trusting a screen.
If you need precision rather than a rough idea, hold on to the unrounded result. Because the conversion factor is exact, the only error in a digital tool comes from how many decimal places it displays. For documents like engineering drawings, shipping specs, or official forms, copy the full-precision value and round only at the very end. For casual use, feet and inches rounded to the nearest inch is almost always what people expect to see.
Quick tips
- Divide by 30.48 for decimal feet, then multiply only the leftover decimal by 12 to get inches.
- Never type a height like 5'11" as 5.11 in a decimal feet box; that equals about 156 cm, not 180 cm.
- Memorize 152.4 cm = 5 feet exactly and add roughly one inch per 2.5 cm to estimate any height fast.
- For official paperwork, keep the unrounded figure and round only at the final step to avoid stacking errors.
The Centimeters to Feet is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.