Feet to Inches

Convert feet to inches instantly, with a reference table.

Feet to Inches conversion table
Feet (ft)Inches (in)
112
224
336
448
560
672
784
896
9108
10120
Formula: 1 ft = 12 in. To convert, multiply your feet figure by 12.

Free to use — premium coming soon

FREE
  • Instant conversion
  • Reference table
  • Reverse direction
PREMIUM
  • Remove ads
  • Custom table ranges
  • Bulk conversions

About the Feet to Inches

Feet to Inches is a free converter that turns any length in feet into its equivalent in inches. The relationship is fixed and exact: one foot is defined as 12 inches, so the tool simply multiplies your figure by 12. Enter 6 feet and you get 72 inches; enter 5.5 feet and you get 66 inches. Because the factor never changes, this is one of the most reliable conversions you can make, and the tool removes the small mental-arithmetic errors that creep in when you do it by hand for larger or fractional values.

People reach for this conversion in everyday and professional situations alike. DIYers and woodworkers convert lumber and shelf lengths because tape measures and cut lists are usually marked in inches. Interior decorators translate room and furniture dimensions to check whether a sofa or rug will fit. Parents and coaches express a child's or athlete's height in inches for growth charts and sports eligibility, and tailors, framers, and sign-makers work in inches for precision. Anyone reading US plans or product specs while thinking in whole feet will find a quick feet-to-inches step keeps every measurement on the same scale.

Using the tool takes one step: type the number of feet and read the result instantly. It accepts whole numbers and decimals, so 8.25 feet converts cleanly to 99 inches without you having to split it into feet and inches first. Under the hood it applies the formula inches = feet x 12, the same arithmetic used in every measurement standard. If you start from a mixed measurement like 5 feet 6 inches, convert the 5 feet to 60 inches and add the leftover 6 to reach 66 inches total, which is what carpenters and tape measures effectively do.

The conversion is exact rather than an approximation, since 12 inches per foot is a definition, not a rounded estimate, so there is no precision loss to worry about. The only rounding you might see is on long decimals you enter yourself. Everything runs in your browser, so the feet values you type are never uploaded to a server, stored, or shared. That makes the tool safe for measurements tied to floor plans, body height, or any figure you would rather keep private, and it works offline once the page has loaded.

Frequently asked questions

How many inches are in a foot?

There are exactly 12 inches in one foot. This is a fixed definition, so the value never changes and the conversion is always exact.

What is the formula to convert feet to inches?

Multiply the length in feet by 12: inches = feet x 12. For example, 7 feet equals 7 x 12 = 84 inches.

How do I convert a mixed measurement like 5 feet 6 inches to inches?

Convert the feet first, then add the loose inches. 5 feet is 5 x 12 = 60 inches, plus the 6 inches gives 66 inches total.

Can I convert decimal feet such as 2.5 feet?

Yes. Decimals are handled the same way: 2.5 x 12 = 30 inches. The tool accepts any whole or decimal feet value.

How do I convert inches back to feet?

Divide the number of inches by 12. For example, 96 inches divided by 12 equals 8 feet, and 66 inches equals 5.5 feet.

From our blog

Fluid Ounces to Cups: The 8-to-1 Rule and When It Breaks

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026

Almost every kitchen conversion between fluid ounces and cups rests on a single fact: in the US system, one cup holds eight fluid ounces. Lock that ratio in and the rest is just division. Sixteen fluid ounces is two cups, four fluid ounces is half a cup, and two fluid ounces is a quarter cup. Once the 8-to-1 rule feels automatic, you can read a recipe written in either unit and translate on the fly without reaching for a calculator at all.

The reason a tool still helps is that real-world numbers rarely land on clean cup boundaries. Beverage cans and food cartons are sized for marketing and shipping, not for tidy fractions, so you end up with quantities like 12, 20, or 24 fluid ounces. Twelve divides into 1.5 cups and twenty into 2.5 cups, but odd figures such as 7 or 22 fluid ounces produce decimals that are awkward to eyeball at the counter. Entering the exact number and reading back the precise cup value removes that guesswork.

There is one trap that catches cooks who work from international recipes: not all cups are equal. The US cup is 8 fluid ounces, roughly 237 milliliters, while the UK imperial cup is 10 fluid ounces, about 284 milliliters, making it nearly 20 percent larger. The fluid ounces themselves differ too, with the US fluid ounce around 4 percent bigger than the imperial one. In baking, where ratios of liquid to flour decide texture, that gap can be the difference between a tender crumb and a dense, wet result.

Keep firmly in mind that this conversion is for liquids measured by volume. A fluid ounce is a measure of space, but a plain ounce on a food label is usually a measure of weight. Eight ounces of water happens to fill one cup, but eight ounces of flour by weight occupies far more than a cup of space, because flour is lighter than water. Whenever a recipe lists dry ingredients in ounces, treat that as weight and use a kitchen scale or an ingredient-specific chart rather than this volume converter.

Put together, the workflow is fast and reliable. Identify whether your figure is a liquid volume in US fluid ounces, type it in, and read the cup value. Use the result to fill a standard liquid measuring cup, checking at eye level for the most accurate read. For anything written in imperial cups or measured by weight, switch to the matching tool. Within those boundaries, fluid ounces to cups is one of the most dependable conversions in any kitchen.

  • Memorize three anchors: 8 fl oz = 1 cup, 16 fl oz = 2 cups, 4 fl oz = half a cup. Most other amounts are easy to interpolate from these.
  • When a result is a decimal like 0.75 cup, translate it to fractions you can measure: 0.75 is three-quarters and 0.25 is one-quarter of a cup.
  • If a recipe comes from a British or Australian source, confirm whether it uses imperial or metric cups before trusting an 8-to-1 conversion.
  • Use a liquid measuring cup with a spout and read the meniscus at eye level; dry measuring cups are not meant for accurate liquid volumes.

Read the full guide →

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

Related tools