Why Convert Square-kilometer To Hectare
This conversion helps when you see land area in km² but need it in hectares.
It is common in farming, land surveys, forestry, and planning maps.
Hectares are often easier to picture for fields and estates.
Quick Answer
1 square kilometer (km²) = 100 hectares (ha)
- 0.5 km² = 50 ha
- 2 km² = 200 ha
- 12.3 km² = 1230 ha
Conversion Formula
hectares (ha) = square kilometers (km²) × 100
This is an exact metric conversion because both units are defined using meters.
One square kilometer is 1,000,000 square meters, and one hectare is 10,000 square meters. Divide 1,000,000 by 10,000 and you get 100.
- Start with your value in km².
- Multiply it by 100.
- The result is the same area in hectares.
Square kilometer
A square kilometer is a metric unit of area equal to a square that is 1 kilometer on each side. Its symbol is km².
It comes from the meter, the base SI length unit, and became widely used as metric mapping and national surveys adopted SI units. It is common for measuring large areas like cities, lakes, and regions.
- Measuring the area of cities and towns on maps
- Reporting the size of lakes, forests, and parks
- Comparing the area of countries or provinces
- Large construction and infrastructure planning areas
- Environmental and land use reports
Hectare
A hectare is a metric unit of area equal to 10,000 square meters, often used for land. Its symbol is ha.
The word comes from the metric prefix “hecto” meaning 100, combined with “are”, an older metric area unit. Hectares became a standard way to describe farmland and property sizes in many countries.
- Measuring farm fields and agricultural land
- Forest and wildlife habitat area reporting
- Land sales, property records, and cadastral maps
- Park, reserve, and plantation sizes
- Irrigation and land management planning
Is this Conversion of Square Kilometer To Hectare Accurate?
Yes. This conversion is exact because it is based on fixed metric definitions. A square kilometer is exactly 1,000,000 m², and a hectare is exactly 10,000 m², so 1 km² equals exactly 100 ha with no rounding.
Our converter uses these standard metric relationships used in textbooks, surveying, agriculture, and government mapping. For more details on how we treat definitions and rounding, see our accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
Here are practical situations where converting km² to hectares makes the number easier to use for land decisions.
- Farm expansion plan: A land report says an area is 1.8 km². Converting gives 1.8 × 100 = 180 ha, which is a common way farmers describe land size.
- Forest management: A protected forest block is 12 km². That equals 1200 ha, helpful when planning tree planting per hectare.
- City park planning: A new green zone is planned at 0.35 km². That is 35 ha, which fits how parks are often budgeted and maintained.
- Flooded area estimate: After heavy rain, a map shows 2.6 km² affected. That equals 260 ha, useful for crop loss estimates per hectare.
- Wildlife reserve sectioning: A reserve section is 7.5 km². That equals 750 ha, making it easier to set patrol targets per hectare.
- Land purchase comparison: Two plots are listed as 0.9 km² and 1.1 km². They are 90 ha and 110 ha, making the difference clear.
- Irrigation coverage: A canal system can serve 3.2 km² of fields. That equals 320 ha, often used for water allocation per hectare.
Quick Tips
- To go from km² to ha, just add two zeros to the number, then adjust for decimals.
- 0.1 km² is 10 ha, so moving the decimal one place left cuts hectares by 10.
- 0.01 km² is 1 ha, which is a handy reference point.
- 1.5 km² becomes 150 ha, because 1.5 × 100 = 150.
- If you need a quick check, hectares should always be larger than km² for the same area.
- For exact work, multiply by 100 instead of estimating.