Using the above mathematical formula (sqm to gaj) we get the following equation:
| Unit | 50 Square meter |
|---|---|
| Square Feet | 538 sq ft |
| Square Centimeters | 500000 sq cm |
| Square Yards | 59.5 sq yd |
| Square Inch | 77500 sq in |
| Square kilometers | 5.0E-5 sq km |
| Acres | 0.01235 acres |
| Hectares | 0.005 ha |
| Cent | 1.23555 cent |
In practical mathematics for real estate, it is common to read area in square meters (m2) while local discussions use gaj. To move confidently between these systems, we rely on a fixed conversion: 1 m2 = 1.207584 gaj. In this explanation we take a medium-sized area, 75 m2, and express it precisely in gaj.
Think of each square meter as a "packet" of 1.207584 gaj. If we have 75 such packets, we simply add the same amount 75 times. Mathematically that is a multiplication, but imagining packets helps students visualize what the formula is really doing.
Around ninety gaj is enough for a comfortable but not oversized space. To turn the number into something you can picture, imagine the following seven layouts that could reasonably fit inside 75 m2:
| Square meter | Gaj |
|---|---|
| 50 sqm | 60.3792 gaj |
| 50.1 sqm | 60.4999584 gaj |
| 50.2 sqm | 60.6207168 gaj |
| 50.3 sqm | 60.7414752 gaj |
| 50.4 sqm | 60.8622336 gaj |
| 50.5 sqm | 60.982992 gaj |
| 50.6 sqm | 61.1037504 gaj |
| 50.7 sqm | 61.2245088 gaj |
| 50.8 sqm | 61.3452672 gaj |
| 50.9 sqm | 61.4660256 gaj |
1 square meter = 1.20 gaj
Using the conversion formula: Gaj = Square Meter × 1.207584, we have Gaj = 50 × 1.207584, and the result is 60.3792 gaj.
Yes - if you mean the South Asian unit gaj (also gaz/guz), it’s still used informally today, especially in real-estate in parts of India and Pakistan. Officially, governments use SI units (metres, square metres) in records and registrations, but people still quote plot sizes in square gaj.