99.17 m² ≈ 1,068 ft² — standard Japanese condo size
Common Area Unit Equivalents
Unit
Square Meters
Square Feet
Acres
1 hectare
10,000
107,639
2.471
1 acre
4,046.86
43,560
1
1 km²
1,000,000
10,763,910
247.105
1 ft²
0.0929
1
0.0000230
1 tsubo
3.306
35.58
0.000817
1 mu (China)
666.67
7,176
0.1647
Understanding Area Measurement Systems
Why Multiple Area Units Exist
Area units evolved independently across cultures. The acre originated from medieval English farming — defined as the amount of land a yoke of oxen could plow in one day. The hectare was introduced with the metric system in 1795 to provide a decimal-friendly land unit. The tsubo emerged in feudal Japan based on the footprint of two tatami mats. Understanding all systems is essential for international property transactions, agricultural planning, and scientific research.
Metric vs. Imperial vs. Traditional Area
The metric system uses powers of ten — square centimeters, square meters, hectares, square kilometers — making mental math straightforward. Imperial units like square inches, square feet, square yards, and acres lack a consistent multiplier, which can introduce conversion errors. Traditional Asian units (tsubo, mu, rai, pyeong) are deeply embedded in local real-estate markets and remain in active use despite official metrication.
Practical Tips for Accurate Conversion
Always verify whether a listing uses gross or net area, as the difference can exceed 20 percent in high-rise buildings. When converting large tracts of land, double-check whether the source uses US survey feet (slightly longer than international feet). For scientific work, express area in SI units (m²) to avoid ambiguity. Nuclear cross-sections are measured in barns (10⁻²⁸ m²) — a unit with a humorous origin: physicists found atomic nuclei surprisingly large, "as big as a barn."