Area Calculator

The Area Calculator helps users quickly determine the area of various 2D shapes. It's useful for students, construction workers, landscapers, and anyone needing to calculate area accurately. The tool supports common shapes like rectangles, circles, and triangles.

S. Siddiqui

Edited by

S. SiddiquiFounder & Editor-in-Chief
Sources:WikipediaWolfram AlphaUpdated May 2026
widthheight

What Is the Area Calculator?

Area is the measure of how much flat space a two-dimensional shape takes up, expressed in square units. Whether you are working out how much paint to buy for a wall, figuring out how much turf you need for a garden, or carrying out a geometry assignment, being able to calculate area quickly is a fundamental skill. MathIsFun has a solid visual introduction to area concepts that helps build intuition before you start plugging in numbers.

This calculator handles four of the most common shapes: triangles, rectangles, circles, and trapezoids. Each one has its own formula, and the tool breaks down the working so you can follow along rather than just getting a number without context. In practice, most real-world area problems can be broken down into one or more of these shapes, which makes this a versatile tool for everyday use.

How to Use the Area Calculator

  1. Select the shape you want to work out the area for from the dropdown menu.
  2. The input fields update to match the dimensions that shape requires. Enter your measurements in the fields provided.
  3. Choose your unit of measurement: millimetres, centimetres, metres, inches, feet, or yards.
  4. The result appears instantly below, showing both the area and the formula used so you can build on the calculation if needed.
  5. If you are working with a circle, you can also check out the Circle Calculator for a more detailed breakdown including circumference and diameter.

Formulas and Methodology

Each shape uses a different formula, and understanding where they come from helps you apply them correctly. Khan Academy's geometry foundations covers the derivations in detail if you want to go deeper.

Shape Formula Variables
Rectangle A = length x width l = length, w = width
Triangle A = (base x height) / 2 b = base, h = perpendicular height
Circle A = π x r² r = radius, π ≈ 3.14159
Trapezoid A = (a + b) / 2 x h a, b = parallel sides, h = perpendicular height

Worked example (triangle): A triangular plot of land has a base of 12 metres and a perpendicular height of 8 metres. The area works out to (12 x 8) / 2 = 48 square metres.

Worked example (trapezoid): A trapezoidal room has parallel sides of 6 m and 9 m, with a perpendicular height of 4 m. The area is (6 + 9) / 2 x 4 = 7.5 x 4 = 30 square metres.

Real-World Applications

Area calculations come up constantly in everyday life, even when you do not immediately recognise them as geometry problems. Here are some of the most common situations where this tool comes in handy:

  • Home improvement: Figuring out how much flooring, carpet, or tiling you need requires calculating the area of each room. Most rooms are rectangular, but bay windows, alcoves, and L-shaped spaces need to be broken down into simpler shapes first.
  • Gardening and landscaping: Whether you are laying turf, spreading gravel, or planning a flower bed, knowing the area helps you order the right quantity of materials and avoid waste.
  • Construction and architecture: Builders work out area constantly, from estimating material quantities to checking that a plot of land meets planning requirements for footprint coverage.
  • Education: Area is a core topic from primary school through to A-level mathematics, and being able to work through problems quickly helps with exam preparation.

Given that most practical projects involve irregular spaces, a common approach is to break the total area down into rectangles and triangles, calculate each one separately, and then add the results together. That said, for more complex shapes, you may want to use graph paper or a CAD tool to get a precise figure.

Key Considerations

A few things are worth keeping in mind before you rely on any area calculation for purchasing or planning decisions:

  • Units must be consistent: If you enter the base in metres and the height in centimetres, the result will be wrong. Convert all measurements to the same unit before calculating.
  • The height in a triangle must be perpendicular: The formula uses the vertical height from the base to the opposite vertex, not the length of a slanted side. If you only have side lengths, you will need to use Heron's formula instead, which is more involved.
  • Add a waste allowance for materials: When buying flooring or tiles, it is standard practice to add 10 to 15 percent to your calculated area to account for cuts and offcuts. As a result, your order quantity should always be slightly larger than the raw area figure.
  • For circular areas, the radius is half the diameter: It is easy to accidentally plug in the diameter rather than the radius. If you have measured the diameter, divide it by two before entering it into the radius field.

Conclusion

The Area Calculator is a straightforward tool that takes care of the arithmetic so you can focus on the practical decisions that depend on it. Whether you are planning a renovation, checking your maths homework, or working out how much material to order for a project, being able to carry out accurate area calculations quickly saves time and prevents costly mistakes. For related calculations, the Circle Calculator and the Volume Calculator extend the same logic into three dimensions.

Last reviewed: May 31, 2026
Founder's Real-World Experience
S. Siddiqui

S. Siddiqui

Founder & Editor-in-Chief, YourToolsBase

How I ordered the right amount of flooring without a single return

In late 2025 I set out to replace the flooring in two rooms: a rectangular living room at 5.2 m by 4.1 m and an L-shaped kitchen I had to split into two rectangles to measure. The living room came out at 21.32 m2, the kitchen sections at 9.6 m2 and 4.8 m2, giving a combined total of 35.72 m2. The flooring supplier recommended adding 10% for cuts, waste, and pattern matching, which brought the order figure to 39.3 m2. I rounded up to 40 m2 to account for any measuring errors.

I used this calculator to work out every section rather than measuring once and hoping for the best. As Maths Is Fun's area reference explains, breaking irregular shapes into simpler rectangles and triangles and summing them is the reliable approach for real-world measurements where rooms rarely come in perfect shapes. The L-shape split took two minutes.

The order arrived and I had 1.4 m2 of boards left over after installation: enough to cover future repairs but not so much that I had wasted money. Getting that balance right on a first order is exactly what this kind of tool is for.

Total area: 35.72 m210% waste allowance applied1.4 m2 leftover after install
Also used alongside: Volume Calculator

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate the area of a rectangle?
Multiply the length by the width. For example, a rectangle that is 5 metres long and 3 metres wide has an area of 5 x 3 = 15 square metres. Make sure both measurements use the same unit before you multiply.
Why does the triangle formula use division by 2?
A triangle is essentially half of a rectangle or parallelogram with the same base and height. If you take a rectangle with base b and height h, a diagonal line cuts it into two identical triangles, each with area (b x h) / 2. That is where the division by two comes from.
What is the difference between area and perimeter?
Area measures the space inside a shape, expressed in square units such as square metres or square feet. Perimeter measures the total length around the outside of a shape, expressed in linear units such as metres or feet. When buying fencing you need perimeter; when buying turf you need area.
How do I find the area of an irregular shape?
The most practical approach is to break the shape down into simpler shapes, such as rectangles and triangles, calculate the area of each one separately, and then add them together. For very irregular shapes, you can also use the grid square method: overlay a grid and count how many squares the shape covers, including partial squares.
What units does the calculator support?
The calculator works with millimetres, centimetres, metres, inches, feet, and yards. The output unit is the square version of whatever unit you select, so if you enter measurements in metres, the result is in square metres.
Can I use this calculator for 3D shapes?
No. This tool calculates the two-dimensional surface area of flat shapes. If you need the surface area or volume of a three-dimensional object such as a cylinder or sphere, use the Volume Calculator, which handles those shapes and shows the relevant formulas.
How do I calculate the area of a circle if I know the diameter rather than the radius?
Divide the diameter by two to get the radius, then use the formula A = pi x r squared. For example, a circle with a diameter of 10 cm has a radius of 5 cm, giving an area of 3.14159 x 25 = approximately 78.54 square centimetres.

Formula

Rate This Tool

Was this tool helpful?

Be the first to rate this tool

💡 Pro Tip

Always use consistent units before calculating. Mixing meters and centimeters is the most common area calculation mistake.

About the Author

S. Siddiqui

S. Siddiqui

Founder & Editor-in-Chief

LinkedIn Profile

S. Siddiqui is the founder and editor-in-chief of YourToolsBase, overseeing all content, tool accuracy, and editorial standards.

View full profile

Authoritative Sources

Formulas and data in this tool are based on guidelines from the above sources.