Convert Bigha to Square Centimetre
The bigha is not a fixed size — it varies by state. Across the states below, 1 bigha = 8,093,713–25,292,850 square centimetre. Pick your state for an accurate result; it runs entirely in your browser.
Bigha to Square Centimetre by state
Because the bigha differs from state to state, the table below gives the value in each state we cover. The square-foot column is the standard defining value; the metre and conversion columns are computed from it.
| State / region | 1 Bigha (sq ft) | 1 Bigha (m²) | 1 Bigha → Square Centimetre | 1 Square Centimetre → Bigha |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uttar Pradesh, Bihar & Rajasthan (pucca) | 27,225 | 2,529.285 | 25,292,850 cm² | 3.9537e-8 bigha |
| Rajasthan (kachha) | 17,424 | 1,618.743 | 16,187,430 cm² | 6.1776e-8 bigha |
| Uttar Pradesh (kachha, western UP) | 9,075 | 843.0951 | 8,430,951 cm² | 1.1861e-7 bigha |
| West Bengal | 14,400 | 1,337.804 | 13,378,040 cm² | 7.4749e-8 bigha |
| Assam | 14,400 | 1,337.804 | 13,378,040 cm² | 7.4749e-8 bigha |
| Madhya Pradesh | 12,000 | 1,114.836 | 11,148,360 cm² | 8.9699e-8 bigha |
| Himachal Pradesh (1/5 acre) | 8,712 | 809.3713 | 8,093,713 cm² | 1.2355e-7 bigha |
| Gujarat (vigha) | 17,424 | 1,618.743 | 16,187,430 cm² | 6.1776e-8 bigha |
| Haryana & Punjab (kachha basis) * | 9,075 | 843.0951 | 8,430,951 cm² | 1.1861e-7 bigha |
| Haryana & Punjab (pucca basis) * | 27,225 | 2,529.285 | 25,292,850 cm² | 3.9537e-8 bigha |
- * Haryana & Punjab (kachha basis): Bigha is not standardised in Haryana/Punjab — local 1/5, 1/4 and 1/2-acre bighas (8,712 / 10,890 / 21,780 sq ft) also exist. Confirm against local records.
- * Haryana & Punjab (pucca basis): Bigha is not standardised in Haryana/Punjab — several local bases exist. Confirm against local records.
Indian land units vary by state and even by district, and local custom can differ from the standard value. For any legal, property or financial purpose, confirm the value against your local revenue records (patwari / tehsil) before relying on it.
About bigha and square centimetre
Bigha: A bigha is a traditional Indian land unit whose size is not standardised — it ranges from roughly 1,500 to 2,530 m² depending on the state and on whether a "pucca" (large) or "kachha" (small) bigha is meant.
Square Centimetre: A square centimetre is a 1 cm × 1 cm square — 1/10,000 of a square metre.
Frequently asked questions
- How many square centimetre are in 1 bigha?
- It depends on the state, because the bigha is not a fixed size. In Uttar Pradesh, Bihar & Rajasthan (pucca), 1 bigha = 25,292,850 square centimetre. Across the states listed, the answer ranges from 8,093,713 to 25,292,850 square centimetre — choose your state in the converter above for an accurate result.
- Why does the bigha vary by state?
- The bigha is a traditional unit recorded differently in each state's revenue system, and many states use a larger "pucca" and a smaller "kachha" version. There is no single national value, so the only correct conversion is the one for your specific state or district.
- How do I convert bigha to square centimetre?
- Pick your state above so the tool uses that state's bigha value, then type the amount. For example, in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar & Rajasthan (pucca), multiply bigha by 25,292,850 to get square centimetre.
- Which states is the bigha used in?
- This converter covers: Uttar Pradesh, Bihar & Rajasthan (pucca); Rajasthan (kachha); Uttar Pradesh (kachha, western UP); West Bengal; Assam; Madhya Pradesh; Himachal Pradesh (1/5 acre); Gujarat (vigha); Haryana & Punjab (kachha basis); Haryana & Punjab (pucca basis). For legal or property transactions, always confirm the local value against your revenue records (patwari / tehsil).
Related area conversions
See all area unit conversions →
Full state-by-state size reference (bigha, biswa, katha, dhur) →
Sources
Per-state values are cross-checked against multiple references, including Wikipedia: Bigha, Wikipedia: Katha, Wikipedia: Measurement of land in Punjab and state land-record references. Where sources genuinely disagree we show the documented variants rather than a single figure.