Convert Hectare to Dunam (ha → dunam)
The hectare equals 10,000 square meters and is the international standard for agricultural land and forestry.
Hectare to Dunam Conversion Table
10 common values| Hectare | Dunam |
|---|---|
| 1 ha | 10 dunam |
| 5 ha | 50 dunam |
| 10 ha | 100 dunam |
| 50 ha | 500 dunam |
| 100 ha | 1,000 dunam |
| 500 ha | 5,000 dunam |
| 1,000 ha | 10,000 dunam |
| 5,000 ha | 50,000 dunam |
| 10,000 ha | 100,000 dunam |
| 50,000 ha | 500,000 dunam |
How to Convert Hectare to Dunam Manually
Step by StepConverting hectares to dunams is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in hectaresStart with the number of hectares (ha) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 10The conversion factor from ha to dunam is 10. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in dunamsThe result is your value in dunams (dunam).
Formula
Multiply the value in hectares by 10. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.1.
dunam = ha × 10ha = dunam × 0.1Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 ha = 10,000 m² = 100 m × 100 m.
- 1 ha ≈ 2.47 acres — quick check for US/UK comparison.
- Agricultural yields quoted as tonnes/hectare are standard worldwide.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using hectares for very small plots — m² is clearer.
- Converting acres to hectares with 2.5 factor — correct is 2.47 (1.2% error).
- Treating "a few hectares" as an exact figure in contracts — always specify.
About Hectare and Dunam
What is the Hectare?
The hectare equals exactly 10,000 square meters (100 m × 100 m) and is the international standard area unit for agricultural land, forestry, and large land development. Adopted as part of the metric system in 1795, the hectare's name combines 'hect-' (one hundred) with 'are' (the basic metric land unit of 100 m²) — meaning 100 ares. A standard FIFA football pitch covers about 0.7 hectares, and Central Park in New York is approximately 341 hectares. Farms across Europe, Latin America, Africa, and Asia are sized in hectares (a small family farm might be 5–20 ha). The hectare relates to the square meter (1 ha = 10,000 m²), the square kilometer (100 ha = 1 km²), the acre (1 ha ≈ 2.471 acres), and the square mile (1 ha ≈ 0.00386 mi²). It is one of the few non-SI units accepted for use with SI for legal land measurement.
- European farm, vineyard and orchard size
- Forestry and conservation land
- Large construction projects and urban development
A rugby pitch is 1 hectare. A Bordeaux vineyard parcel is typically 5–10 ha. The Vatican City covers 44 ha.
What is the Dunam?
The dunam equals exactly 1,000 square meters in its modern metric form, used primarily in Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, and Turkey for land measurement and real estate. The unit's name derives from Ottoman Turkish 'dönüm,' itself from a verb meaning 'to turn' — historically the area a yoke of oxen could plow in a day, similar to the acre's origin. Older 'Ottoman dunam' values varied (around 919 m²), but most countries in the region have standardized to the metric dunam of 1,000 m². The dunam is the everyday unit in Middle Eastern real estate and agricultural contexts. It relates to the square meter (1 dunam = 1,000 m² = 0.1 ha), the hectare (10 dunams = 1 ha), and the acre (1 acre ≈ 4.047 dunams). Family olive groves, vineyards, and urban building plots are routinely measured in dunams.
- Israeli and Palestinian land records
- Turkish rural property
- Agricultural documents in the former Ottoman region
An Israeli small farm might be 50 dunams (5 ha). Agricultural yields sometimes quoted per dunam.