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Square Meters to Ares (m² to a) Converter

1 = 0.01 a

1 Square Meter equals 0.01 Ares (1 m² = 0.01 a). Convert Square Meters to Ares with formula, table, and examples.

One square meter equals exactly 0.01 ares. To convert, simply divide the number of square meters by 100 or move the decimal point two places to the left. The are is a metric unit of land area equal to 100 square meters, making it a convenient middle step between the square meter and the hectare. The are is an unusual unit in international terms. Most English speakers have never encountered it, yet it remains a standard part of everyday life in German-speaking countries. When a German real estate listing describes a residential plot as 6 Ar, a local reader immediately pictures a building lot of 600 square meters, a comfortable size for a single-family house with a garden. The are fills a gap that the metric system otherwise leaves open: square meters work for rooms and buildings, hectares work for farms and forests, but residential plots fall awkwardly between the two. The are covers exactly this middle ground. The conversion factor of 100 is as clean as metric conversions get. One are is a square with sides of 10 meters, so 10 times 10 gives 100 square meters. There is no approximation, no historical complication, and no regional variation. A hundred ares make one hectare, and a hundred hectares make one square kilometer, creating a tidy chain of factors of 100 from the square meter up to the square kilometer. Outside German-speaking Europe, the are appears in some Eastern European countries and in parts of Asia, but it is the German, Austrian, and Swiss property markets where the unit truly thrives. If you are buying land, reading a Grundbuch extract, or interpreting a Bebauungsplan in these countries, understanding ares is essential.

How to Convert Square Meters to Ares

a = ÷ 100
Divide the value in Square Meters by 100
  1. Take your value in Square Meters
  2. Divide by 100
  3. Read the result in Ares

Common Square Meters to Ares Conversions

Square Meters (m²) Ares (a) Status
1 m² 0.01 a
10 m² 0.1 a
25 m² 0.25 a
50 m² 0.5 a
100 m² 1 a
150 m² 1.5 a
200 m² 2 a
300 m² 3 a
400 m² 4 a
500 m² 5 a
600 m² 6 a
800 m² 8 a
1,000 m² 10 a
2,000 m² 20 a
5,000 m² 50 a
10,000 m² 100 a
50,000 m² 500 a
100,000 m² 1,000 a

Good to Know About Square Meters to Ares Conversion

The are is one of the few metric units more common in German than in English. German, Austrian, and Swiss property listings, land registries, and building regulations use the are daily for residential plots, while most English-speaking countries have never adopted it.

Square Meters to Ares: What You Need to Know

A typical building plot for a single-family home in a German suburb is 4 to 8 ares, or 400 to 800 square meters. A generous garden alone might be 2 to 3 ares. A Schrebergarten allotment is usually 2 to 4 ares, just enough for vegetable beds, a few fruit trees, a patch of lawn, and the obligatory garden shed. The are also works well for describing small commercial properties. A neighborhood supermarket might sit on a plot of 15 to 30 ares. A small industrial workshop might occupy 10 ares. A tennis court with surroundings is about 2.6 ares. These are the kinds of properties that feel too large when expressed in square meters and too small for hectares, which is precisely why the are exists. In Austrian and Swiss property law, the are appears frequently alongside the square meter in official land registry documents. A cadastral extract might describe a parcel as 5 Ar 47 m², meaning 547 square meters total. This notation, while old-fashioned, remains legally valid and is still produced by land registry offices in all three German-speaking countries. For anyone moving to Germany from an English-speaking country, the are is one of those cultural adjustments that no relocation guide mentions. House listings, garden center flyers, and municipal building regulations all assume familiarity with the unit. Knowing that one are is 100 square meters removes a small but persistent source of confusion in daily life.

What is a Square Meter?

The SI derived unit of area, equal to the area of a square with sides of one meter. The global standard for measuring rooms, apartments, building plots, and land parcels in most countries.

Metric real estate and apartments room and floor areas construction and architecture
Learn more about Square Meter →

What is a Are? a

A metric unit of area equal to 100 square meters. Primarily used in European land measurement, especially for residential plots and gardens. One hundredth of a hectare.

Metric residential land plots garden areas European land registries
Learn more about Are →

Going the other way? Use our Ares to Square Meters converter.

Square Meters to Ares FAQ

  • Exactly 100 square meters. One are is the area of a square with 10-meter sides, and 10 times 10 equals 100. This is an exact metric definition.

  • Divide the number of square meters by 100. For example, 450 square meters divided by 100 equals 4.5 ares. You can also move the decimal point two places to the left.

  • One hectare equals 100 ares. A hectare is 10,000 square meters while an are is 100 square meters. The hectare is used for large agricultural and geographical areas, while the are is used for residential plots and gardens, especially in German-speaking countries.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Square Meters to Ares

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • If you speak English, the are slipped under your radar because it never caught on in English-speaking countries. They jumped straight from square feet to acres. In Germany, however, the are is as familiar as the kilogram. Move to Munich and you will learn it within a week of apartment hunting.

  • Yes, both come from the Latin word area, meaning a level piece of open ground. The French scientists who created the metric system in the 1790s chose the name deliberately. So every time you calculate an area in ares, you are being etymologically redundant.

  • Survival gardening estimates suggest about 2 ares (200 square meters) of intensively cultivated land per person for basic vegetable needs. That is roughly one Schrebergarten. You would get tired of potatoes and cabbage, but you would not starve.

Need the reverse? Use our Ares to Square Meters converter. See all Area converters.