Tamil Nadu Cent to square feet
Convert Tamil Nadu Cent to square feet using the published 435.6 sq ft factor, with source status and official-record checks.
Instant Tamil Nadu answer
For the Tamil Nadu context recorded in the GharGanit dataset, 1 Cent equals 435.6 sq ft. The factor is labelled “documented” because a regional name should never be separated from its evidence, locality and known exceptions. One acre equals 100 cents.
Cent conversion table
The table multiplies the published factor before converting the same area to standard square metres and acres. It is useful for reading or comparing an area, but it does not certify the parcel, boundary or ownership.
| Cent | Square feet | Square metres | Acres |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 435.6 | 40.47 | 0.01 |
| 2 | 871.2 | 80.94 | 0.02 |
| 5 | 2,178 | 202.34 | 0.05 |
| 10 | 4,356 | 404.69 | 0.1 |
| 20 | 8,712 | 809.37 | 0.2 |
How the calculation works
Square feet = Cent × 435.6. Square metres are then calculated from the square-foot result using the fixed international area relationship, and acres are calculated by dividing by 43,560 sq ft. Keeping the regional factor as the first visible step makes the only location-sensitive part easy to inspect.
What the status means
The “documented” label describes the source treatment in GharGanit; it is not a rating, endorsement or legal finding. The source registry records the reference used for this factor, while the dataset preserves its scope and exception note so a copied number is not presented as universal.
Check the official Tamil Nadu record
Use Tamil Nadu land-record e-services to inspect the current official record service for the relevant parcel and locality. Match the district, village, survey or plot identifiers carefully, and read the unit as written in the deed or record before relying on a conversion.
Before a purchase, loan or boundary decision
An online conversion cannot establish title, boundaries, encumbrances, mutation status or the legally recorded area. Compare the registered deed, current government record and survey information. Ask the relevant land-record office or an authorised survey professional when the factor or parcel description is unclear.