Tree Diameter Calculator - DBH from Circumference | LazyTools

Tree Diameter Calculator

Calculate tree diameter (DBH) from circumference, or convert between diameter, radius, circumference and basal area. Includes protocols for irregular stems, multi-stem trees and leaning trees.

Circumference to DBHBasal area outputIrregular stem guideMetric and Imperial

Tree Diameter Calculator Tool

Enter measurement
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DBH = Circumference / pi (3.14159). Measure at 4.5 ft (1.37 m) on the uphill side of the tree.
Enter values and click Calculate
Diameter (DBH)
-
-
Radius
-
half of diameter
Circumference
-
pi x diameter
Basal area
-
sq ft
Cross-section
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sq inches
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★ Key features

Why use this free tree diameter calculator?

Built with the features most competitors miss — from benchmark comparisons to multi-method inputs and actionable guidance.

🔶
All conversions in one step
Enter circumference or diameter and get DBH, radius, circumference, basal area, and cross-section area simultaneously.
🌏
Metric and imperial toggle
Works in inches and sq ft, or cm and m2. All outputs update with a single dropdown change.
🌳
Basal area integrated
Calculates basal area (sq ft or m2) directly alongside the diameter conversion.
📈
Multi-stem tree guidance
Explains correct protocol for measuring multi-stem, leaning, and swollen-stem trees.
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Field measurement notes
Result includes the stem type note so you remember the correct measurement protocol for irregular trees.
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Free, browser-based
No registration, no download. Works on desktop and mobile.
📄 How to use

How to use this tree diameter calculator

1
Enter circumference or diameter
Enter circumference if measured with a standard tape around the trunk, or DBH if you used a D-tape.
2
Select units
Choose imperial (inches) or metric (cm) to match your measurement.
3
Select stem type for guidance
Choose single stem, multi-stem, or leaning tree for correct measurement notes in the results.
4
Read all outputs
Diameter, radius, circumference, basal area, and cross-section area are all shown simultaneously.
📚 Reference

Circumference to diameter quick reference

Circumference (in)Diameter / DBH (in)Basal area (sq ft)Approx DBH (cm)
12"3.82"0.0799.7 cm
24"7.64"0.31819.4 cm
36"11.46"0.71629.1 cm
48"15.28"1.27338.8 cm
60"19.10"1.99048.5 cm
75"23.87"3.10760.6 cm
100"31.83"5.52480.8 cm
📈 vs the competition

How this calculator compares

LazyTools fills the gaps most competing tools leave open — deeper analysis, benchmark context, and actionable guidance alongside the core calculation.

FeatureLazyToolsOmniCalculatorRapidTablesForestry Suppliers
Circumference to DBH✓ YesPartial
DBH to radius, BA, cross-section✓ Yes
Multi-stem tree guidance✓ Yes
Leaning tree protocol✓ Yes
Metric and imperial toggle✓ Yes
Basal area output integrated✓ Yes
📖 Complete guide

Tree Diameter Calculator: Complete Guide

Tree diameter — specifically Diameter at Breast Height (DBH) — is the most widely measured forestry variable worldwide. It underpins timber volume calculations, growth monitoring, basal area determination, and carbon accounting at every scale.

Why DBH is the universal forestry standard

DBH measured at 4.5 ft (1.37 m) is the international standard ensuring consistency across surveys, researchers, and datasets worldwide. At this height the trunk has cleared the root flare and butt swell, producing a more circular cross-section than at ground level. This reproducibility is essential when comparing data across plots, years, or research teams working in different countries.

Converting circumference to diameter

The relationship C = pi x D means D = C / pi = C / 3.14159. A circumference of 60 inches converts to 60 / 3.14159 = 19.1 inches diameter. This conversion is exact for a perfectly circular stem. Real trees are rarely perfectly circular; averaging two perpendicular diameter measurements closely approximates the true mean diameter for forestry inventory purposes.

Field measurement methods

Three methods are used professionally. A diameter tape (D-tape) reads diameter directly when wrapped around the trunk — it is calibrated in diameter units not circumference and is the most common professional method. A standard tape measures circumference, then divide by pi. Calipers measure diameter directly by pressing against both sides; more accurate but slower, used more in research settings for precision measurements.

Special measurement protocols for non-standard stems

Multi-stem trees: measure each stem at 4.5 ft separately and sum the basal areas. Forked trees below breast height: treat as separate trees. Leaning trees: measure at 4.5 ft on the uphill side. Trees on slopes: measure 4.5 ft up the uphill face. Trunk swellings at breast height: move the measurement point just above or below the deformity and note the adjustment. Coppice stools: measure at 1 ft (30 cm) above the highest cut surface using standard formula.

DBH in timber volume and carbon accounting

Timber volume formulas combine DBH and total height. The cylinder approximation (Volume = Basal Area x Height) is refined by species-specific taper equations and form factors. Carbon sequestration is estimated from allometric equations with DBH (and sometimes height) as primary inputs. National forest carbon inventories rely on repeated DBH measurements from permanent sample plots to track biomass change over time for greenhouse gas reporting.

Frequently asked questions

Divide circumference by pi (3.14159). Example: 48 inches circumference / 3.14159 = 15.28 inches diameter.
DBH = Diameter at Breast Height, measured at exactly 4.5 ft (1.37 m) above ground. The universal standard for tree diameter used in timber volume, basal area, and carbon accounting globally.
Measure trunk circumference with a standard tape and divide by pi. Or measure across the trunk in two perpendicular directions and average the two values for an approximate diameter.
Measure each stem separately at 4.5 ft and calculate basal area for each. The combined stand basal area is the sum of all individual stem basal areas.
Measure at 4.5 ft on the uphill side of the lean. Do not measure on the underside.
Diameter is the straight-line distance across the trunk through the centre. Circumference is the distance around the trunk. Circumference = pi x Diameter (3.14159 x Diameter).
The 4.5 ft (1.37 m) standard was established in the 19th century as a convenient height above the butt swell and root flare where the stem is more circular and consistent. The FAO uses 1.3 m as an international standard.
Basal area (sq ft) = 0.005454 x DBH squared. It is the cross-sectional area of the trunk at breast height, used to estimate timber volume and assess stand density.
Smartphone apps (iForest, Tree Mapper) can estimate diameter using AR or photo analysis, but a measuring tape gives much more accurate results for forestry inventory purposes.
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