Convert Mile to Foot (mi → ft)
The statute mile is the official road-distance unit in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Myanmar.
Mile to Foot Conversion Table
10 common values| Mile | Foot |
|---|---|
| 1 mi | 5,280 ft |
| 5 mi | 26,400 ft |
| 10 mi | 52,800 ft |
| 25 mi | 132,000 ft |
| 50 mi | 264,000 ft |
| 100 mi | 528,000 ft |
| 250 mi | 1,320,000 ft |
| 500 mi | 2,640,000 ft |
| 1,000 mi | 5,280,000 ft |
| 5,000 mi | 26,400,000 ft |
How to Convert Mile to Foot Manually
Step by StepConverting miles to feet is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in milesStart with the number of miles (mi) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 5,280The conversion factor from mi to ft is 5,280. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in feetThe result is your value in feet (ft).
Formula
Multiply the value in miles by 5,280. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.000189.
ft = mi × 5,280mi = ft × 0.000189Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 mile ≈ 1.6 km. Mental trick: add 60% to the mile figure.
- A running mile in 4 minutes is an elite pace; a recreational runner covers it in 8–10 minutes.
- US cars show mph only. Check the speedometer scale before assuming the units.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing statute miles (1.609 km) with nautical miles (1.852 km) — a 15% gap.
- Reading a US speedometer as km/h — 70 mph is 112 km/h, not 70.
- Using 1.5 or 1.6 for quick conversions when precision matters — use 1.609 for engineering or legal documents.
About Mile and Foot
What is the Mile?
The statute mile equals exactly 1,609.344 meters since the international yard agreement of 1959. The unit traces back to the Roman 'mille passuum' (one thousand paces), each pace being roughly 5 Roman feet, giving 5,000 Roman feet. The modern mile evolved through medieval England, where it was standardized to 5,280 feet by Queen Elizabeth I in 1593. Today it remains the official road-distance unit in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Myanmar. American and British road signs, car speedometers, and athletic tracks (the famous 1-mile run) all use the mile. Distinct from the nautical mile (1,852 m), the statute mile is sometimes called the 'land mile.' London to Edinburgh by road is about 400 miles, and a marathon is exactly 26.22 miles.
- US and UK motorway distances and speed limits
- Car odometers in American and British vehicles
- Track events (mile run, quarter-mile drag racing)
London to Edinburgh is about 400 miles by road. A marathon is 26.22 miles. US highways typically post 65–75 mph speed limits.
What is the Foot?
The foot equals exactly 0.3048 meters or 12 inches under the 1959 international agreement. The unit's name reflects its ancient origin as the length of an adult human foot, with measurements varying by region — from 250 mm to over 330 mm — until standardization. The foot is the dominant unit for human height in the United States and the United Kingdom (a person is described as '5 ft 10 in' rather than 178 cm), for building heights, and for aviation altitudes (worldwide aircraft fly at altitudes given in feet, even in metric countries). It remains the standard for residential floor counts, ceiling heights, and ladder ratings. The foot relates to the meter (1 ft ≈ 0.305 m), the yard (3 ft = 1 yd), and the mile (5,280 ft = 1 mi).
- Aircraft cruising altitude in international aviation
- US building heights, ceiling heights and room dimensions
- Mountain elevations on global maps (Everest = 29,032 ft)
Airliners cruise at 35,000 ft (10.7 km). Mount Everest is 29,032 ft (8,849 m). A standard US ceiling is 8 ft (2.44 m).