Convert Meter to Fathom (m → ftm)
The meter is the base SI unit of length, defined since 1983 by the speed of light in vacuum.
Meter to Fathom Conversion Table
10 common values| Meter | Fathom |
|---|---|
| 1 m | 0.546807 ftm |
| 5 m | 2.734033 ftm |
| 10 m | 5.468067 ftm |
| 25 m | 13.670166 ftm |
| 50 m | 27.340332 ftm |
| 100 m | 54.680665 ftm |
| 250 m | 136.70166 ftm |
| 500 m | 273.40332 ftm |
| 1,000 m | 546.80665 ftm |
| 5,000 m | 2,734.0332 ftm |
How to Convert Meter to Fathom Manually
Step by StepConverting meters to fathoms is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in metersStart with the number of meters (m) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.546807The conversion factor from m to ftm is 0.546807. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in fathomsThe result is your value in fathoms (ftm).
Formula
Multiply the value in meters by 0.546807. For the reverse direction, multiply by 1.8288.
ftm = m × 0.546807m = ftm × 1.8288Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 metre ≈ 3.28 feet — multiply by 3.28 for a quick foot conversion.
- The height of an average adult is 1.6 to 1.8 metres — useful for sanity-checking lengths.
- For very small or very large quantities use prefixes: 1 km = 1000 m, 1 mm = 0.001 m.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing square metres (area) with metres (length). A 20 m² room is not 20 m long.
- Using 3.3 instead of 3.2808 when converting to feet — the error grows on long distances.
- Writing "meter" when you mean "metre" in British English, or vice versa. Both are accepted but follow one convention per document.
About Meter and Fathom
What is the Meter?
The meter is the base SI unit of length. Originally defined in 1793 as one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole through Paris, it has been redefined several times for greater precision. Since 1983, the meter has been defined by the speed of light: the distance light travels in vacuum during 1/299,792,458 of a second. This definition links the meter to a fundamental physical constant, making it reproducible anywhere in the universe. The meter is the parent unit for all metric lengths — kilometers, centimeters, millimeters — and is used globally in science, engineering, construction, and sports. A standard door is about 2 meters tall, and the average adult walking pace covers roughly 1 meter per step.
- Room dimensions and building measurements in Europe
- Track-and-field events (100 m, 200 m, 400 m sprint)
- Scientific papers and engineering drawings worldwide
A standard door is about 2 metres tall. An Olympic swimming pool is exactly 50 metres long. The Eiffel Tower is 330 metres tall.
What is the Fathom?
The fathom equals exactly 1.8288 meters or 6 feet and is the traditional marine depth unit. The word derives from the Old English 'fæðm,' meaning the span of outstretched arms — historically the distance a sailor could measure rope by stretching it from fingertip to fingertip. Used since antiquity for sounding water depth (lowering a weighted line and counting fathom marks), the fathom remains common in nautical charts, diving manuals, and marine literature. Famous from Mark Twain's pen name (a riverboat lead's call meaning 'safe water,' 2 fathoms or 12 feet) and Shakespeare's 'full fathom five,' the unit retains cultural resonance. Modern oceanographic science prefers the meter, but the fathom persists in fishing, recreational diving, and historical maritime contexts. The fathom relates to the foot (1 fathom = 6 ft) and the yard (1 fathom = 2 yd).
- Water depth on older US nautical charts
- Maritime literature and historical navigation
- Sport diving and scuba depth references in the US
A "mark twain" reading — made famous by the Mississippi riverboats — meant 2 fathoms (3.66 m) of water, the minimum safe depth.