Uses the modern mainland China value. Regional or historical values may differ.
1 qing = 100 mu = 66,666.67 m² = 6.6667 ha = 16.4737 acres.
2 qing = 200 mu = 32.947 acres.
| Qing | Qing | Mu | Acres | Hectares |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 顷 | 1 顷 | 100 亩 | 16.4737 ac | 6.6667 ha |
| 2 顷 | 2 顷 | 200 亩 | 32.9474 ac | 13.3333 ha |
| 5 顷 | 5 顷 | 500 亩 | 82.3685 ac | 33.3333 ha |
| 10 顷 | 10 顷 | 1,000 亩 | 164.7369 ac | 66.6667 ha |
| 20 顷 | 20 顷 | 2,000 亩 | 329.4739 ac | 133.3333 ha |
Qing appears in land-use writing and agricultural context more than everyday speech.
One qing is about 16.5 acres.
The calculation is based on 1 mu = 666.67 square meters.
Land-area units such as mu and qing are common in Chinese farmland, property and planning references. Use modern mainland values for ordinary current listings, but verify legal or historical land records against the source context.
Use this page as a quick lookup, then keep the original Chinese unit beside the converted number when accuracy matters. That is especially important for pricing, schoolwork, land records, shipping documents, recipes, medicine, historical writing or any source where the unit may be part of a larger standard.
For the broader table and source caveats, read the Chinese units conversion chart.