Accurate length conversion tool for μm and mm
Convert micrometres to millimetres instantly with the exact factor of 1 μm = 0.001 mm. Includes bidirectional conversion and full length breakdowns across nanometres, centimetres, metres, inches, and thou for engineering, manufacturing, and science in 2026.
Professional length conversion for precision engineering, metrology, biology, and materials science
Convert micrometres to millimetres using the exact SI factor of 1 μm = 0.001 mm — a perfectly defined relationship in the International System of Units. The micrometre (symbol μm, commonly called a micron) is one millionth of a metre (10⁻⁶ m), while the millimetre is one thousandth of a metre (10⁻³ m). Therefore, 1 mm = 1000 μm exactly. This is a clean power-of-1000 relationship with no approximation required — the Micrometres to Millimetres Converter applies this precise factor for accurate results at any scale.
Switch instantly between micrometres to millimetres and millimetres to micrometres conversion modes. Results are also displayed across nanometres, centimetres, metres, inches, and thou (thousandths of an inch) — providing a complete length picture from a single input for mechanical engineers, machinists, microscopists, biologists, materials scientists, and students working across metric and imperial length unit conventions in international technical contexts.
Essential for precision machining and CNC tolerances (surface roughness in μm, dimensional tolerances in mm), optical engineering (lens coatings, wavelength-scale features), biology and microscopy (cell diameter in μm, tissue section thickness), semiconductor and electronics manufacturing (IC feature sizes, film thicknesses), materials science (particle size analysis, coating thickness measurement), and metrology and quality control (gauge block dimensions, micrometer screw gauge readings). The Micrometres to Millimetres Converter handles all these applications with instant, exact results for 2026.
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The micrometre (μm) — also spelled micrometer and informally called a micron — is the SI unit of length equal to one millionth of a metre (10⁻⁶ m). The symbol μm uses the Greek letter mu (μ) for the SI prefix micro, denoting a factor of 10⁻⁶. The millimetre (mm) is the SI unit of length equal to one thousandth of a metre (10⁻³ m). Since 1 mm = 10⁻³ m and 1 μm = 10⁻⁶ m, the relationship is exactly 1 mm = 1000 μm and 1 μm = 0.001 mm — a clean, exact power of 1000 with no approximation or rounding involved.
The micrometre sits at the boundary between the world visible to the naked eye and the microscopic realm. The smallest feature a typical human eye can resolve is approximately 100 μm (0.1 mm) under ideal conditions. A human hair ranges from 17–181 μm in diameter, typically around 70 μm. Most bacteria are 1–10 μm long. Red blood cells are approximately 6–8 μm in diameter. In engineering, the micrometre is the standard unit for surface roughness (Ra values in μm), machining tolerances, and coating thicknesses — where values in the range 0.1–100 μm (0.0001–0.1 mm) are common. The Micrometres to Millimetres Converter bridges these two scales precisely.
Example: 2500 μm ÷ 1000 = 2.5 mm | 0.05 mm × 1000 = 50 μm
Use this reference table for quick μm to mm lookups. Values span from single-nanometre-scale features through biological cell sizes, engineering tolerances, and macroscopic dimensions — covering the full range relevant to nanotechnology, biology, precision machining, and everyday measurement.
| Micrometres (μm) | Millimetres (mm) | Nanometres (nm) | Inches (in) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.001 μm | 0.000001 mm | 1 nm | 3.94 × 10⁻⁸ in | 1 nanometre |
| 0.1 μm | 0.0001 mm | 100 nm | 3.94 × 10⁻⁶ in | Virus size |
| 1 μm | 0.001 mm | 1,000 nm | 0.0000394 in | Large bacterium |
| 5 μm | 0.005 mm | 5,000 nm | 0.000197 in | Red blood cell diameter |
| 10 μm | 0.01 mm | 10,000 nm | 0.000394 in | Fine mist droplet |
| 25 μm | 0.025 mm | 25,000 nm | 0.000984 in | 1 thou (25.4 μm = 1 mil) |
| 70 μm | 0.07 mm | 70,000 nm | 0.00276 in | Human hair (typical) |
| 100 μm | 0.1 mm | 100,000 nm | 0.00394 in | Naked eye resolution limit |
| 500 μm | 0.5 mm | 500,000 nm | 0.01969 in | Grain of fine sand |
| 1,000 μm | 1 mm | 1,000,000 nm | 0.03937 in | 1 millimetre exactly |
| 10,000 μm | 10 mm | 10,000,000 nm | 0.3937 in | 1 centimetre |
| 25,400 μm | 25.4 mm | 25,400,000 nm | 1 in exactly | 1 inch exactly |
The diagram below shows how micrometres and millimetres fit into the broader SI length unit hierarchy — helping you understand the scale relationships from nanometres through to metres in the full metric length system.
1 μm = 0.001 mm = 0.0001 cm = 0.000001 m (exact) | 1 mm = 1,000 μm = 1,000,000 nm = 0.001 m (exact)
The micrometre (μm) is the SI unit for lengths at the scale of cells, bacteria, and fine engineering features. It equals exactly 10⁻⁶ metres — defined since 2019 through the fixed numerical value of the speed of light and the SI second. The informal name "micron" (plural: microns) is widely used in industry and biology. The micrometre symbol μm requires the Greek letter mu (μ); when this is unavailable, "um" is used as an ASCII substitute. The micrometer instrument (a precision measuring tool) is named after the unit, as it was originally designed to measure dimensions in the micrometre range.
In precision engineering and manufacturing, tolerances and surface finishes are routinely specified in micrometres. ISO surface roughness grades (Ra values) range from Ra 0.025 μm (mirror finish, optical components) to Ra 50 μm (rough machined surfaces). CNC machining typically achieves tolerances of ±5–50 μm; high-precision grinding achieves ±1–5 μm; ultra-precision diamond turning can achieve sub-micrometre tolerances. Standard ISO 286 fits and tolerances for shafts and holes are specified in micrometres — for example, an H7/p6 interference fit on a 50 mm shaft specifies tolerances in the range of 25–50 μm (0.025–0.05 mm).
The micrometre is the natural unit for describing biological cells and microorganisms. Human red blood cells are 6–8 μm in diameter (0.006–0.008 mm). White blood cells (leukocytes) are 10–20 μm. Most bacteria are 1–10 μm in length — E. coli is approximately 2 μm × 0.5 μm. Viruses are 0.02–0.3 μm (20–300 nm). The wavelength of visible light (400–700 nm) is sub-micrometre, which is why optical microscopes are limited to resolving features larger than approximately 0.2 μm (200 nm) — smaller features require electron microscopy.
The history of semiconductor miniaturisation is told in micrometres — and now nanometres. Early Intel 4004 processors (1971) used a 10 μm process node. By the mid-1980s, nodes had shrunk to 1 μm. The late 1990s saw 0.25 μm (250 nm) nodes. Modern processors (2026) use nodes at 3–5 nm — over 3,000 times smaller than the original 10 μm. While current nodes are described in nanometres, converting to micrometres (e.g., 5 nm = 0.005 μm = 0.000005 mm) helps contextualise the extraordinary precision of modern chip fabrication relative to everyday engineering tolerances.
The millimetre (mm) is the workhorse unit of mechanical engineering, architecture, and everyday measurement in metric countries. All engineering drawings (ISO, DIN, JIS standards) default to millimetres as the dimension unit. Standard metric fastener threads (M3, M6, M10) are specified in mm. Sheet metal thicknesses are in mm (0.5–3 mm common). A standard A4 sheet of paper is 210 × 297 mm. A 1 mm feature — containing exactly 1000 micrometres — represents the bridge between the precision micrometre world of surface finishes and tolerances, and the everyday millimetre world of mechanical dimensions.
In imperial engineering, the thou (also called a mil or thousandth of an inch) is the traditional precision unit: 1 thou = 0.001 inch = 25.4 μm = 0.0254 mm. This means 1 mm ≈ 39.37 thou, and 1 μm ≈ 0.03937 thou. American machinists specify tolerances in thou (e.g., ±0.001″ = ±1 thou = ±25.4 μm), while metric machinists use μm. Converting between μm and thou is common in international manufacturing — our Micrometres to Millimetres Converter includes thou in its results breakdown precisely for this cross-system comparison.
The conversion is simply dividing or multiplying by 1000. To convert μm to mm, move the decimal point 3 places to the left: 2500 μm → 2.500 mm. To convert mm to μm, move the decimal 3 places to the right: 0.075 mm → 75 μm. Key benchmarks: 1 μm = 0.001 mm; 100 μm = 0.1 mm; 1000 μm = 1 mm; 25.4 μm = 1 thou; 25,400 μm = 1 inch = 25.4 mm. For surface roughness: Ra 1.6 μm (a common engineering finish) = 0.0016 mm. For hair width: 70 μm = 0.07 mm.
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This reverse reference table shows common millimetre values converted to micrometres — essential for engineers and scientists needing to express millimetre drawing dimensions in the micrometre precision range used by metrology instruments, surface finish specifications, and microscopy applications.
| Millimetres (mm) | Micrometres (μm) | Nanometres (nm) | Thou (mil) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.001 mm | 1 μm | 1,000 nm | 0.03937 thou | 1 micrometre exactly |
| 0.01 mm | 10 μm | 10,000 nm | 0.3937 thou | Fine machining tolerance |
| 0.025 mm | 25.4 μm | 25,400 nm | 1 thou exactly | 1 thousandth of an inch |
| 0.05 mm | 50 μm | 50,000 nm | 1.969 thou | Typical CNC tolerance |
| 0.1 mm | 100 μm | 100,000 nm | 3.937 thou | 0.1 mm (fine resolution) |
| 0.5 mm | 500 μm | 500,000 nm | 19.685 thou | Half millimetre |
| 1 mm | 1,000 μm | 1,000,000 nm | 39.370 thou | One millimetre exactly |
| 5 mm | 5,000 μm | 5,000,000 nm | 196.85 thou | Five millimetres |
| 10 mm | 10,000 μm | 10,000,000 nm | 393.70 thou | One centimetre |
| 25.4 mm | 25,400 μm | 25,400,000 nm | 1,000 thou | One inch exactly |
The word "micrometer" has two distinct meanings that cause frequent confusion, particularly in American English. In British and Australian English, the unit of length is spelled "micrometre" (following the SI convention of -metre for length units: millimetre, centimetre, kilometre) while the measuring instrument is spelled "micrometer". In American English, both the unit and the instrument are spelled "micrometer" — context determines the meaning. The SI symbol μm always refers unambiguously to the unit of length. When searching for conversion tools, both "micrometres to millimetres" and "micrometers to millimeters" refer to the same μm → mm length conversion — our converter handles both spellings and produces identical results.
The International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) maintains the official SI unit definitions including the metre and all its prefixed multiples — the millimetre, micrometre, nanometre, and all other derived length units. The 2019 SI revision fixed the metre through the exact numerical value of the speed of light (299,792,458 m/s), making the micrometre and millimetre permanently and exactly defined in terms of fundamental physical constants. The BIPM SI Brochure (9th edition) provides the authoritative source for all length unit relationships used in our Micrometres to Millimetres Converter.
Visit BIPM →The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) publishes the engineering standards that define how micrometres and millimetres are used in precision manufacturing worldwide. Key standards include ISO 286 (limits and fits for shafts and holes, tolerances in μm), ISO 1302 (surface texture indication on drawings, Ra values in μm), ISO 4287 (surface roughness parameters in μm), and ISO 1 (standard reference temperature of 20°C for length measurements). These ISO standards make the micrometre the de facto unit for precision engineering tolerances and surface finish specifications globally.
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