Centimeters to Inches

Convert centimeters to inches instantly, with a reference table.

Centimeters to Inches conversion table
Centimeters (cm)Inches (in)
10.39
20.79
31.18
41.57
51.97
62.36
72.76
83.15
93.54
103.94
Formula: 1 cm = 0.393701 in. To convert, multiply your centimeters figure by 0.393701.

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About the Centimeters to Inches

The Centimeters to Inches converter turns any metric length into its imperial equivalent in inches. It exists because the inch is defined as exactly 2.54 centimeters, an exact value agreed internationally in 1959, so every conversion has one correct answer rather than an approximation. Type a value in centimeters and the tool returns the result in inches instantly, with no rounding surprises. Whether you are reading a product spec sheet written in metric, sizing a frame for a photo, or translating a European clothing measurement, this converter removes the mental arithmetic and the risk of dividing by the wrong number.

Reach for this tool whenever a measurement arrives in centimeters but you think, shop, or build in inches. Common moments include checking a TV or monitor diagonal, fitting furniture and artwork into a room, converting body or garment measurements from a metric size chart, and reading dimensions on imported packaging. People in the United States, the UK, and Canada hit this constantly because everyday life still runs on inches while most of the world's manuals and labels use centimeters. The converter is just as handy for students working through homework and for hobbyists in sewing, woodworking, or 3D printing who jump between unit systems mid-project.

Under the hood the math is simple: inches equal centimeters divided by 2.54, which is the same as multiplying by about 0.393701. So 10 cm becomes 3.937 inches, 50 cm becomes 19.685 inches, and 100 cm becomes 39.3701 inches. Because many trades want fractions rather than decimals, the tool can also express the result to the nearest practical fraction such as 1/16 or 1/64 of an inch, matching the markings on a real tape measure or ruler. For tall heights, centimeters can be split further into feet and inches, since one foot is twelve inches.

Accuracy and privacy are both straightforward here. Since 2.54 is an exact definition, the only thing that affects precision is how many decimal places you keep, and the converter shows enough digits to stay reliable for engineering as well as casual use. Everything runs directly in your browser, so the numbers you enter are never uploaded to a server, stored, or shared, which makes the tool fast, free, and safe to use offline once the page has loaded. There is no sign-up and no limit on how many conversions you can perform.

Frequently asked questions

How do I convert centimeters to inches?

Divide the number of centimeters by 2.54, since one inch equals exactly 2.54 cm. For example, 30 cm divided by 2.54 is about 11.81 inches. You can also multiply centimeters by 0.393701 for the same result.

How many inches is 1 centimeter?

One centimeter equals approximately 0.3937 inches, slightly less than four tenths of an inch. Put another way, it takes 2.54 centimeters to make a single inch.

Is the centimeter to inch conversion exact?

Yes. The inch was internationally defined as exactly 2.54 centimeters in 1959, so the conversion factor is exact, not an estimate. Any tiny imprecision only comes from rounding the decimal result.

How do I convert a height in centimeters to feet and inches?

First convert centimeters to inches by dividing by 2.54, then divide that total by 12 to get whole feet, with the remainder being the leftover inches. For example, 170 cm is about 66.9 inches, which equals roughly 5 feet 7 inches.

Can the tool show fractions of an inch instead of decimals?

Yes. Decimal inches can be rounded to the nearest common fraction such as 1/16 or 1/64, which matches the marks on a standard tape measure or ruler. For instance, 10 cm is 3.937 inches, or about 3 15/16 inches.

From our blog

Watts to Amps: How to Read an Appliance Label and Know What Your Circuit Can Handle

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026

Almost every electrical device tells you its wattage but not its current draw, yet current is what trips breakers, blows fuses, and overheats undersized wire. Converting watts to amps closes that gap. The relationship is simple once you have the supply voltage: current equals power divided by voltage. The hard part is not the arithmetic, it is knowing which voltage and which power factor to plug in for your situation, and then interpreting the answer against the limits of your circuit.

Voltage is non-negotiable in this conversion. A device rated at 1500 W behaves very differently depending on where it is plugged in: on a 120 V circuit it pulls 12.5 A, but on a 240 V supply the same 1500 W draws only 6.25 A. That is the whole reason ovens, dryers, and EV chargers run on higher voltage, halving the voltage doubles the current, and higher current demands thicker, more expensive cable. Always use the voltage the device will actually run at, not a generic figure.

For DC and resistive AC loads the plain formula is enough, but reactive AC loads need a power factor. Power factor is the gap between the real power doing work (watts) and the apparent power the circuit must actually deliver (volt-amps). A motor running at a power factor of 0.8 draws 25 percent more current than its wattage alone implies, because amps equal watts divided by both volts and power factor. Skipping power factor is one of the most common reasons a hand calculation underestimates real current draw.

Off-grid and low-voltage systems are where this conversion bites hardest. On a 12 V camper or solar setup, modest wattages become large currents: a 400 W panel array works out to roughly 33 A, and a 1200 W inverter load can pull 100 A from the battery. Those numbers drive everything downstream, the wire gauge, the fuse within reach of the battery terminal, and the DC breaker, which is often sized at 125 percent of the calculated current and rounded up to the next standard rating.

Once you have the amp figure, compare it to your circuit's headroom before trusting it. A 15 A household circuit should not carry a continuous 14 A load, and motors briefly draw an inrush current several times their running value at startup. Use the converted amps as your starting planning number, add margin for continuous duty and startup surge, and verify against the equipment nameplate and local wiring rules. For permanent installations, a qualified electrician should sign off on the final sizing.

  • Read the supply voltage off the device label or your outlet (commonly 120 V or 240 V in homes, 12 V or 24 V in vehicles and solar systems) and use that exact figure, not a rounded one.
  • Set power factor to 1.0 for heaters and bulbs, but lower it to around 0.8 for motors and pumps, otherwise you will underestimate the current they draw.
  • For DC fuse and breaker sizing, take the calculated amps, multiply by 1.25 for continuous loads, then round up to the next standard fuse or breaker rating.
  • Remember that startup inrush on motors and compressors can be several times the running amps, so size protection and wiring for the surge, not just the steady-state figure.

Read the full guide →

Tool by the Super Simple Digital Tools Team. Reviewed by our editorial team. Free to use, no signup required.

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