Convert acres to linear feet for fencing, property surveys, and setback calculations. An acre measures area (43,560 sq ft), not length — so shape determines the linear dimensions. Our calculator estimates frontage, perimeter, and fence costs based on lot shape.
Acres to Linear Feet (Frontage & Perimeter)
Leave empty for square-lot estimate
National avg: $15/LF wood, $25/LF vinyl
Why Acres Don't Directly Convert to Linear Feet
The most important thing to understand: an acre measures area, not length. Asking "how many linear feet in an acre?" is like asking "how long is a pound?" Without knowing the shape, you can't answer.
1 acre = 43,560 square feet
This is always true. But this acre could be a perfect square (208.7′ × 208.7′), a long rectangle (100′ × 435.6′), a narrow strip (50′ × 871.2′), or an irregular polygon with curves. Each shape has a completely different perimeter and frontage, despite being the same acreage.
Common Acre Shapes and Their Linear Dimensions
Same acreage, completely different linear measurements. Shape is everything for fencing and surveying.
| Acreage | Shape | Dimensions | Frontage (LF) | Perimeter (LF) | Fence Cost @ $15/LF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 acre | Square | 208.7′ × 208.7′ | 208.7 LF | 835 LF | $12,525 |
| 1 acre | Rectangle (wide) | 150′ × 290.4′ | 150 LF | 881 LF | $13,212 |
| 1 acre | Rectangle (standard) | 100′ × 435.6′ | 100 LF | 1071 LF | $16,068 |
| 1 acre | Rectangle (narrow) | 60′ × 726′ | 60 LF | 1572 LF | $23,580 |
| 2 acres | Square | 295.2′ × 295.2′ | 295 LF | 1181 LF | $17,712 |
| 5 acres | Square | 466.7′ × 466.7′ | 467 LF | 1867 LF | $28,002 |
| 10 acres | Square | 660′ × 660′ | 660 LF | 2640 LF | $39,600 |
| 40 acres | Square (quarter-quarter) | 1,320′ × 1,320′ | 1,320 LF | 5,280 LF (1 mile) | $79,200 |
*Fence cost = perimeter × cost per LF. Actual costs vary by terrain, gates, corners, and local labor rates.
Standard Zoning Frontage Requirements by Lot Type
Most municipalities require minimum road frontage for a lot to be buildable. These are the typical minimums:
| Zone Classification | Typical Min. Frontage | Typical Min. Lot Size | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| R-1 Single-Family (suburban) | 80–100 LF | 0.25–0.5 acre | Most common zoning for subdivisions |
| R-1 Single-Family (urban) | 50–60 LF | 0.10–0.25 acre | Tighter lots in older neighborhoods |
| R-2/R-3 Multi-Family | 100–150 LF | 0.5–2 acres | Duplexes, triplexes, small apartments |
| Agricultural / Rural Residential | 200–330 LF | 5–40 acres | Many counties require 330′ (1/8 mile) |
| Commercial (neighborhood) | 80–150 LF | 0.5–2 acres | Requires parking + road access |
| Flag Lot (by variance) | 20–40 LF | 0.25–5 acres | Access strip required; often needs variance |
| Corner Lot | Frontage required on both streets | Varies | Setbacks apply to both street-facing sides |
Always check your local zoning ordinance. Requirements vary significantly by municipality. A survey is the only way to confirm actual frontage.
Worked Examples: Converting Acres to Practical Linear Feet
| Scenario | Acreage | Shape / Depth | Frontage (LF) | Perimeter | What This Means |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard suburban lot | 0.25 acre | 80′ frontage, 136′ deep | 80 LF | 432 LF | Wood fence $6,480; chain-link $2,160 |
| Fencing a square 2-acre property | 2 acres | 295′ × 295′ | 295 LF | 1,181 LF | Vinyl fence @ $25/LF = $29,525 |
| Rural 10-acre parcel with 330′ frontage | 10 acres | 330′ × 1,320′ | 330 LF | 3,300 LF | Barbed wire fence @ $3/LF = $9,900 for perimeter |
| Irregular lot: survey says... | 0.75 acre | Irregular (survey required) | ~110 LF | ~680 LF | Always get a survey; irregular shapes vary wildly |
Common Mistakes When Converting Acres to Linear Feet
Mistake #1: Assuming Acres Directly Convert to LF
There is no fixed conversion. An acre is 43,560 sq ft of area. Asking "how many linear feet in 1 acre?" is like asking "how many inches long is a gallon of water?" You can't answer without knowing the shape of the container. Every property has unique dimensions. A square acre has 835 LF of perimeter but a 100′×435.6′ rectangle acre has 1,071 LF. Same acreage, 28% more fence needed.
Mistake #2: Using Tax Assessor Maps Instead of Surveys
Tax assessor parcel maps (GIS) are approximate. They can be off by 3–10 feet on a typical suburban lot, and much more on rural parcels. If you order fencing based on GIS frontage measurements, you could be 5–10% off. On a 2-acre property requiring 1,181 LF of fence, a 5% error is 59 LF of extra (or missing) material — about $885 worth at $15/LF. A survey costs $400–800 and prevents this error.
Mistake #3: Confusing Perimeter With Frontage
Road frontage is the portion of your property that touches a public road. Perimeter is the total distance around all sides of your lot. They are completely different measurements. A corner lot has frontage on two streets but the same perimeter as a similar interior lot. Zoning cares about frontage. Fencing cares about perimeter. If you confuse them, you'll either fail your building permit application (underestimating frontage) or order the wrong amount of fence (confusing frontage for perimeter).
Mistake #4: Not Accounting for Setbacks and Easements
Your property line isn't necessarily where your fence can go. Setbacks (required distance between structure and property line) may prevent fencing right at the boundary. Utility easements (often 10–20 feet along rear and side lot lines) restrict where you can build permanent structures including fences. A "10-foot drainage and utility easement" on the rear of your lot means you cannot fence that 10-foot strip, reducing the fenceable perimeter by ~20 LF (both sides). Always check your plat survey for easements before calculating fence needs.