Angle Converter
Convert between degrees, radians, gradians, arcminutes, milliradians, and more — instantly.
How to Convert
Formula
Unit Definition
Unit Definition
Conversion Table
Common Values| From | To |
|---|
Convert from Degrees (°)
Convert to Radians (rad)
All Angle Conversions from Degrees
Angle Units Explained
Degrees (°)
The most familiar angle unit. A full rotation = 360°. A right angle = 90°. Angles are used in geometry, navigation, carpentry, and astronomy. The choice of 360° for a full circle dates back to ancient Babylonian astronomy and their base-60 counting system.
Radians (rad)
The SI unit of angle. 1 radian is the angle where arc length = radius. A full circle = 2π rad ≈ 6.2832 rad. Radians simplify calculus (derivatives of sin/cos have no constants) and are the natural unit in physics, engineering, and advanced mathematics.
Gradians (grad)
Also called gons, gradians divide a right angle into 100 units (full circle = 400 grad). Created during the French Revolution to metricate angle measurement. Heavily used in surveying, civil engineering, and geodesy across Europe, especially in France and Sweden.
Arcminutes & Arcseconds
Arcminutes (1/60°) and arcseconds (1/3600°) provide fine angular precision. One arcminute of latitude = 1 nautical mile (1,852 m). Arcseconds are used in astronomy — the Hubble Space Telescope resolves 0.05 arcsecond detail. Atmospheric seeing is typically 1–2 arcseconds.
Milliradians (mrad)
1 mrad = 0.001 rad ≈ 0.0573°. At 1,000 m range, 1 mrad subtends exactly 1 m — making it ideal for military optics, long-range shooting, and artillery targeting. Most modern tactical rifle scopes use mrad (mil-dot) adjustments of 0.1 mrad per click.
Mils — NATO vs. Soviet
The NATO mil divides a full circle into 6400 units (1 mil = 0.05625°). The former Soviet/Warsaw Pact system uses 6000 mils (1 mil = 0.06°). Both approximate 1 mrad but with round numbers for field calculations. NATO mils are standard in Western militaries for artillery, mortars, and map reading.