Measure any garden shape in seconds. Rectangle, circle, triangle, L-shape, and irregular beds — enter your dimensions and get the area in m², ft², and acres instantly. No tape measure maths needed.
From dimensions to area in under 5 seconds. No formula knowledge needed, no unit conversion required.
Use a tape measure or a trundle wheel to measure your garden's longest length and widest point. For circular beds, measure across the full diameter. For L-shapes, measure each section as a separate rectangle. Sketching a rough plan first saves time and prevents missed measurements.
Takes 5 minutes to measureChoose from rectangle, circle, triangle, L-shape, ring border, or multi-zone. If your garden doesn't match a single shape, use the multi-zone tab to add multiple areas and get a combined total. Most gardens can be broken into rectangles and circles.
Takes 5 secondsResults display in square metres, square feet, square yards, and acres simultaneously — whichever unit your project requires. Use the result directly when ordering turf, bark, topsoil, or artificial grass — every supplier quotes by area.
Results in under 5 secondsWhether you're ordering from a UK garden centre, a US landscaping supplier, or sizing an irrigation system — you get the area in the right unit, instantly.
Most UK suppliers quote turf, artificial grass, topsoil, and bark mulch by the square metre. This is the primary result and the number to use when placing any order with a UK landscaping company or garden centre.
Essential for US gardening suppliers, seed packets rated per ft², irrigation coverage specifications, and any gardening advice written in imperial units. The calculator provides both so you never need to convert manually.
Allotments, paddocks, and small farm plots are often quoted in acres or fractions of an acre. Whether you're calculating fertiliser rates per acre or simply describing your plot size, the acres result gives you the figure to use directly.
Every area result includes a quick note on how many turf rolls, bags of seed, or compost bags the area requires — so the calculator does double duty as a basic material estimator as well as an area measurement tool.
The difference between estimating by eye and measuring properly comes down to whether you under-order and run short mid-project — or over-order and waste money.
Research on spatial estimation consistently shows that people underestimate irregular shapes by 20–35%. A garden that looks like "about 30 square metres" is frequently 40+. That gap means either a second delivery of materials or running short halfway through laying turf — neither option is good.
Turf, artificial grass, topsoil, bark mulch, gravel, decking, and paving slabs are all sold by area. An inaccurate area calculation leads directly to an inaccurate order. A 20% measurement error on a full garden turfing project easily represents hundreds of pounds of over- or under-spending.
Real gardens have curved borders, circular beds, L-shaped lawns, and ring borders around trees. Each of these shapes has a different area formula — and applying a rectangle formula to a circular bed gives a result that's wrong by up to 21%. The more complex the garden, the bigger the error from simplified calculations.
Measuring in metres, looking up a conversion factor, multiplying, getting a slightly wrong answer — this chain of manual steps introduces error at every stage. The calculator converts all units automatically, removing the most common source of material ordering mistakes entirely.
Calculating area on the spot while standing in the garden with a tape measure gives you the result when and where you need it — not when you get back to a computer. This calculator works in any mobile browser, no app download required.
Almost every garden planning and area calculation app on the market now requires a subscription. This calculator is free, permanently, with no usage limit and no account required. Open it, calculate, close it — your result, instantly.
| Method | Handles irregular shapes | Multiple units output | Works on mobile | Free to use | Result in seconds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZonedGarden Calculator | ✓ 6 shapes | ✓ m², ft², yd², acres | ✓ Yes | ✓ Always | ✓ Under 5 sec |
| Manual calculation | If you know the formula | ✗ One unit at a time | ✓ With calculator app | ✓ Yes | ✗ Takes minutes |
| Generic online calculator | ✗ Rectangle only | ✗ Usually one unit | ✓ Usually | ✓ Usually | ✓ Yes |
| Garden planning app | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✗ Subscription | After setup |
From a simple square lawn to an L-shaped border with a circular centrepiece — every common garden shape is covered.
Standard geometry — applied instantly, with automatic unit conversion at every step.
Each shape uses a different formula, applied automatically when you select the shape tab and click Calculate. For rectangles and squares: Area = Length × Width. For circles: Area = π × radius² (or π × (diameter÷2)²). For triangles: Area = (base × perpendicular height) ÷ 2.
L-shapes and multi-zone gardens are handled by calculating each rectangular section separately and summing the totals. The ring border calculator subtracts the inner circle area from the outer circle area to give you just the border zone — useful for mulching or planting around a circular lawn or paved area.
All measurements are first converted to metres before the formula is applied, then the result in m² is converted to ft², yd², and acres using standard conversion factors. This means you can mix units freely — measure one dimension in feet and another in metres — and the result is always accurate.
L × W — the foundation for most garden measurements
π × r² — applied from diameter or radius automatically
(B × H) ÷ 2 — always use perpendicular height, not slope
Outer circle area minus inner circle area = border only
Use this table to cross-check calculator results or convert between units without the tool.
| Area in m² | Square Feet (ft²) | Square Yards (yd²) | Acres | About the Size of… |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 m² | 107.6 ft² | 11.9 yd² | 0.0025 ac | A small patio or single raised bed area |
| 25 m² | 269 ft² | 29.9 yd² | 0.0062 ac | A typical back garden lawn |
| 50 m² | 538 ft² | 59.8 yd² | 0.0124 ac | A medium back garden |
| 100 m² | 1,076 ft² | 119.6 yd² | 0.0247 ac | A generous back garden |
| 250 m² | 2,691 ft² | 299 yd² | 0.062 ac | A large residential garden |
| 1 acre | 43,560 ft² | 4,840 yd² | 1 acre | About 0.4 hectares — a small paddock |
A good calculator is only as accurate as the measurements you put into it. These habits prevent the most common measuring mistakes.
Take each measurement twice from different starting points and use the average if they differ. A single tape measure reading across an uneven surface can be 10–15cm out, which compounds significantly across a large area.
Draw a rough plan of the space before you start measuring. Label each dimension as you go. Trying to remember which measurement was which without a sketch is how mistakes happen — especially with L-shapes and multi-zone gardens.
Measure to the inner edge of any paving, edging, or border rather than the outer edge. The area you need to cover with grass seed, turf, or mulch is the plantable interior, not the total plot including hard edging materials.
For large gardens, Google Maps satellite view with the measure distance tool gives a useful starting estimate before you go outside with a tape measure. It's not precise enough for a material order, but it's a good sense-check for whether your tape measure result is in the right ballpark.
Always order slightly more material than your calculated area suggests — 5% for simple rectangular areas, 10% for complex or curved shapes. This covers cuts, waste, and the occasional measurement error, and prevents a second delivery for the sake of a single roll of turf.
The questions we get asked most when gardeners use this tool for the first time.
Anyone who needs to know how much garden they're working with before ordering materials, planning planting, or preparing a quote.
Ordering turf, topsoil, bark mulch, or fertiliser requires knowing the exact area. This calculator gives you that number instantly — before calling a supplier or heading to a garden centre.
Quick area calculations on site, without needing specialist software or a surveying tool. Works in any mobile browser while standing in the garden.
Planning a new patio, deck, or raised bed layout? Get the area right before ordering materials — a measurement error on a paving project wastes slabs and money at the same time.
Knowing the exact area of each growing bed helps with planning crop rotation, calculating fertiliser rates, and estimating how much compost the plot needs each season.
A quick outdoor area calculation during a property viewing or survey — without carrying surveying equipment or waiting to get back to the office to run the numbers.
Area calculation is a core maths skill. This calculator shows the formula and result side by side — useful for checking manual work or demonstrating real-world geometry applications.
Every irrigation system calculation starts with area. Use the garden area calculator to measure each zone, then feed those figures into the ZonedGarden Irrigation Calculator to get the water requirements for each section of the garden.