Image comparing the acre (the small pink area at lower left) to other units. The entire yellow square is onesquare mile; the dark blue area at right represents 100 acres.
Traditionally, in theMiddle Ages, an acre was conceived of as the area of land that could beploughed by one man using a team of eightoxen in one day.[3]
The acre is still a statutory measure in the United States. Both the international acre and the US survey acre are in use, but they differ by only four parts per million (see below). The most common use of the acre is to measure tracts of land.
The acre is used in many established and formerCommonwealth of Nations countries by custom. In a few, it continues as astatute measure, although not since 2010 in the UK, and not for decades inAustralia,New Zealand, andSouth Africa. In many places where it is not a statute measure, it is still lawful to "use for trade" if given as supplementary information and is not used forland registration.
One acre equals1⁄640 (0.0015625) square mile, 4,840 square yards, 43,560 square feet,[2] or about 4,047square metres (0.4047hectares) (see below). While all modern variants of the acre contain 4,840 square yards, there are alternative definitions of a yard, so the exact size of an acre depends upon the particular yard on which it is based. Originally, an acre was understood as a strip of land sized at fortyperches (660 ft, or 1 furlong) long and four perches (66 ft) wide;[4] this may have also been understood as an approximation of the amount of land a yoke of oxen could plough in one day (a furlong being "a furrow long"). Asquare enclosing one acre is approximately 69.57 yards, or 208 feet 9 inches (63.61 metres), on a side. As a unit of measure, an acre has no prescribed shape; any area of 43,560 square feet is an acre.
In theinternational yard and pound agreement of 1959, the United States and five countries of theCommonwealth of Nations defined the international yard to be exactly 0.9144 metre.[5] The US authorities decided that, while the refined definition would apply nationally in all other respects, theUS survey foot (and thus the survey acre) would continue 'until such a time as it becomes desirable and expedient to readjust [it]'.[5] By inference, an "international acre" may be calculated as exactly4,046.8564224 square metres but it does not have a basis in any international agreement.
Both the international acre and the US survey acre contain1⁄640 of a square mile or 4,840 square yards, but alternative definitions of a yard are used (seesurvey foot andsurvey yard), so the exact size of an acre depends upon the yard upon which it is based. The US survey acre is about 4,046.872 square metres; its exact value (4046+13,525,426/15,499,969 m2) is based on an inch defined by 1 metre = 39.37 inches exactly, as established by theMendenhall Order of 1893.[6] Surveyors in the United States use both international and survey feet, and consequently, both varieties of acre.[7]
Since the difference between the US survey acre and international acre (0.016 square metres, 160 square centimetres or 24.8 square inches), is only about a quarter of the size of anA4 sheet orUS letter, it is usually not important which one is being discussed. Areas are seldom measured with sufficient accuracy for the different definitions to be detectable.[8]
In India, residential plots are measured in square feet or square metre, while agricultural land is measured in acres.[38] InSri Lanka, the division of an acre into 160 perches or 4 roods is common.[39]
In Pakistan, residential plots are measured inkanal (20marla = 1 kanal = 605 sq yards) and open/agriculture land measurement is in acres (8kanal = 1 acre) andmuraba (25 acres = 1muraba = 200kanal),jerib, wiswa andgunta.[40][41]
Its use as a primary unit for trade in the United Kingdom ceased to be permitted from 1 October 1995, due to the 1994 amendment of theWeights and Measures Act,[42] where it was replaced by thehectare – though its use as a supplementary unit continues to be permitted indefinitely.[43] This was with the exemption ofland registration,[42] which records the sale and possession of land;[44] in 2010HM Land Registry ended its exemption.[43] The measure is still used to communicate with the public[45] and informally (non-contract) by the farming and property industries.[46][47][48]
A furlong by a chain (furlong 220 yards, chain 22 yards)
40 rods by 4 rods, 160 rods2 (historically fencing was often sold in 40 rod lengths[49])
1⁄640 (0.0015625) square mile (1 square mile is equal to 640 acres)
Perhaps the easiest way for US residents to envision an acre is as a rectangle measuring 88 yards by 55 yards (1⁄10 of 880 yards by1⁄16 of 880 yards), about9⁄10 the size of a standardAmerican football field. To be more exact, one acre is 90.75% of a 100-yd-long by 53.33-yd-wide American football field (without theend zone). The full field, including the end zones, covers about 1.32 acres (0.53 ha).
For residents of other countries, the acre might be envisioned as rather more than half of a 1.76 acres (0.71 ha)football pitch.
Therod is a historical unit of length equal to5+1⁄2 yards. It may have originated from the typical length of a mediaevalox-goad. There are 4 rods in onechain.
Thefurlong (meaning furrow length) was the distance a team of oxen could plough without resting. This was standardised to be exactly 40 rods or 10 chains.
Anacre was the amount of land tillable by one man behind one team of eight oxen in one day. Traditional acres were long and narrow due to the difficulty in turning the plough and thevalue of river front access.
Anoxgang was the amount of land tillable by one ox in a ploughing season. This could vary from village to village, but was typically around 15 acres.
Avirgate was the amount of land tillable by two oxen in a ploughing season.
Acarucate was the amount of land tillable by a team of eight oxen in a ploughing season. This was equal to 8 oxgangs or 4 virgates.
The word acre is derived from theNorman, attested for the first time in a text ofFécamp in 1006 to the meaning of «agrarian measure».[50] Acre dates back to the old Scandinavian akr “cultivated field, ploughed land” which is perpetuated inIcelandic and theFaroeseakur “field (wheat)”,Norwegian andSwedishåker,Danishager “field”,cognate withGermanAcker,Dutchakker,Latinager,Sanskritajr, andGreekαγρός (agros). In English, an obsolete variant spelling wasaker.
According to theAct on the Composition of Yards and Perches, dating from around 1300, an acre is "40perches [rods] in length and four in breadth",[51] meaning 220 yards by 22 yards.[a] As detailed in the diagram, an acre was roughly the amount of land tillable by a yoke of oxen in one day.[52]
Before the enactment of themetric system, many countries in Europe used their own official acres. In France, the traditional unit of area was thearpent carré, a measure based on the Roman system of land measurement.Theacre was used only inNormandy (and neighbouring places outside its traditional borders), but its value varied greatly across Normandy, ranging from 3,632 to 9,725 square metres, with 8,172 square metres being the most frequent value.[clarification needed] But inside the samepays of Normandy, for instance inpays de Caux, the farmers (still in the 20th century) made the difference between thegrande acre (68 ares, 66 centiares) and thepetite acre (56 to 65 ca).[53] The Normandyacre was usually divided in 4vergées (roods) and 160 squareperches, like the English acre.
The Normandyacre was equal to 1.6arpents, the unit of area more commonly used in Northern France outside of Normandy. In Canada, the Parisarpent used inQuebec before the metric system was adopted is sometimes called "French acre" in English, even though the Parisarpent and the Normandyacre were two very different units of area in ancient France (the Parisarpent became the unit of area of French Canada, whereas the Normandyacre was never used in French Canada).
In Germany, the Netherlands, and Eastern Europe the traditional unit of area wasMorgen. Like the acre, themorgen was a unit of ploughland, representing a strip that could be ploughed by one man and an ox or horse in a morning. There were many variants of themorgen, differing between the different German territories, ranging from1⁄2 to2+1⁄2 acres (2,000 to 10,100 m2). It was also used inOld Prussia, in the Balkans,Norway, andDenmark, where it was equal to about two-thirds acre (2,700 m2).
Statutory values for the acre were enacted in England, and subsequently the United Kingdom, by acts of:
Historically, the size of farms and landed estates in the United Kingdom was usually expressed in acres (or acres,roods, andperches), even if the number of acres was so large that it might conveniently have been expressed in square miles. For example, a certain landowner might have been said to own 32,000 acres of land, not 50 square miles of land.
The acre is related to the square mile, with 640 acres making up one square mile. One mile is 5280 feet (1760 yards). In western Canada and the western United States, divisions of land area were typically based on the square mile, and fractions thereof. If the square mile is divided into quarters, each quarter has a side length of1⁄2 mile (880 yards) and is1⁄4 square mile in area, or 160 acres. These subunits are typically then again divided into quarters, with each side being1⁄4 mile long, and being1⁄16 of a square mile in area, or 40 acres. In the United States, farmland was typically divided as such, and the phrase "the back 40" refers to the 40-acre parcel to the back of the farm. Most of theCanadian Prairie Provinces and the US Midwest are on square-mile grids for surveying purposes.
Customary acre – The customary acre was roughly similar to the Imperial acre, but it was subject to considerable local variation similar to the variation incarucates,virgates,bovates, nooks, and farundels. These may have been multiples of the customary acre, rather than the statute acre.
Builder's acre = an even 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2) or 200 by 200 feet (61 m × 61 m), used in US real-estate development to simplify the math and for marketing. It is nearly 10% smaller than a survey acre, and the discrepancy has led to lawsuits alleging misrepresentation.[54]
^Minimum Standard Detail Requirements For ALTA/NSPS Land Title Surveys. Federick, MD: American Congress on Surveying and Mapping. 2021. [The stated maximum allowable "precision" (page 2) is 2 cm and 50 parts per million. An instrument consistently measuring 2 cm short would measure the area of a one international acre square, 63.614907 m on a side, as 4044.3 square metres, 2.6 square metres less than the true value, a far greater discrepancy than the difference between the international and survey acres.]
^Great Britain;Owen Ruffhead (1765).Statutes at Large. Printed by M. Baskett. p. 421. Retrieved12 February 2012.It is ordained that 3grains of barley dry and round do make aninch, 12 inches make 1foot, 3 feet make 1 yard, 5 yards and a half make aperch, and 40 perches in length and 4 in breadth make an acre.
^"acre, n.".Oxford English Dictionary. December 2011.