What is a deciare (da)?
A deciare (da) is a metric unit of area equal to 10 square meters. It’s used for land and field sizes in some places.
What is a centiare (ca)?
A centiare (ca) is a metric unit of area equal to 1 square meter. It’s a small land area unit and is easy to picture as a 1 m by 1 m square.
How many centiares are in one deciare?
There are 10 centiares in 1 deciare.
1 da = 10 ca
What is the formula to convert deciares to centiares?
Multiply deciares by 10.
centiares = deciares × 10
What is the formula to convert centiares to deciares?
Divide centiares by 10.
deciares = centiares ÷ 10
Why does converting deciares to centiares use a factor of 10?
Because a deciare is 10 square meters and a centiare is 1 square meter. The ratio is 10 to 1.
How do I convert deciares to centiares by moving the decimal point?
Multiply by 10 by moving the decimal one place to the right.
Example: 2.7 da = 27 ca
Can you give a few quick examples of deciares to centiares?
- 0.5 da = 5 ca
- 1 da = 10 ca
- 3.2 da = 32 ca
- 12 da = 120 ca
Are deciare and centiare part of the are (a) system?
Yes. Both belong to the metric are system used for land area.
- 1 are (a) = 100 ca = 10 da
- 1 da = 0.1 a
- 1 ca = 0.01 a
How do deciares and centiares relate to square meters?
They are direct metric matches:
Do deciares and centiares relate to hectares?
Yes, through square meters and ares:
- 1 hectare (ha) = 10,000 m² = 1,000 da = 10,000 ca
- 1 da = 0.001 ha
- 1 ca = 0.0001 ha
What does “da” and “ca” stand for in land measurements?
- da is short for deciare
- ca is short for centiare
These are common abbreviations in land records and surveys.
When would I use centiares instead of deciares?
Centiares fit better for small areas like garden plots or small lots. Deciares work well for medium land sizes where square meters feel too detailed.
Is the deciare to centiare conversion exact?
Yes. The conversion is exact because both units are defined using square meters.
What are common mistakes when converting deciares to centiares?
- Multiplying by 100 instead of 10
- Mixing up symbols (da vs. ca)
- Dropping decimals when converting fractional deciares
A quick check helps: centiares should be a bigger number than deciares.