Convert Centimeter (cm) to Millimeter (mm) instantly.
About these units
Centimeter (cm)
The centimeter, 1/100 of a meter, strikes a balance between precision and ease of communication, making it indispensable in everyday life. Its size is well-matched to human-scale objects—furniture, body dimensions, school supplies, and clothing—so people in metric countries regularly estimate or visualize lengths in centimeters without tools. Many professions rely heavily on centimeters, including medicine (wound sizes, tumor dimensions), tailoring, building trades, and interior design. In science, centimeters serve as a practical unit for measurements too small for meters but too large for millimeters. Biologists, for example, may measure specimen sizes or growth stages in centimeters. Its intuitive scale and decimal alignment with meters ensure that both laypeople and professionals can convert easily among related units.
Millimeter (mm)
A millimeter is one-thousandth of a meter and is used extensively in fields that require fine control and precision. Engineers and machinists frequently rely on millimeters in technical drawings and machining specifications, since the unit supports very precise tolerances without resorting to decimals. In construction, millimeters provide clarity for component dimensions, door and window fittings, and joinery work. Millimeters are also critical in medical imaging (such as CT or MRI slice thickness), entomology, electronics, and automotive design. Many mechanical failures or malfunctions arise from deviations of only a few millimeters—highlighting the importance of precision. On a more everyday level, rainfall measurements and snow depth reports often use millimeters for accuracy.