Miles to Yards Converter
Convert miles to yards. The formula used here is 1 mile = 1760 yards. The formula is yd = mi × 1760; 1 mi is 1,760 yd.
A US customary and imperial length unit used for road and travel distances.
A US customary and imperial length unit equal to 3 feet.
Start with your value in miles, then apply the formula below. It stays visible so you can catch rounding mistakes instead of just copying the output.
When the converted length drives a cut, fit, clearance, or route estimate, decide whether to round to the nearest mark, round up for safety, or keep decimals for documentation.
Many length factors are exact by definition, but practical measurements still depend on rulers, survey tools, tolerances, and how the result will be used. This page displays converted values with up to 3 decimal places by default.
| Miles | Yards |
|---|---|
| 1 mi | 1,760 yd |
| 5 mi | 8,800 yd |
| 10 mi | 17,600 yd |
| 26.2 mi | 46,112 yd |
| 100 mi | 176,000 yd |
Useful for checking construction and DIY measurements. Use the same formula with your exact input if the measurement needs to be documented.
Useful for travel, mapping, or athletics distances. Use the same formula with your exact input if the measurement needs to be documented.
Useful for product dimensions and classroom conversions. Use the same formula with your exact input if the measurement needs to be documented.
How do I convert miles to yards?
Enter the value in miles and apply yd = mi × 1760. Round the yards result after the conversion, not before.
What is 1 mile in yards?
1 mi equals 1,760 yd with the current rounding setting. Keep more decimal places when the result feeds another calculation.
What is 5 mi in yd?
5 mi is 8,800 yd. It appears in the lookup table so you can compare it with nearby amounts.
Can I convert yards back to miles?
Yes. Use the reverse Yards to Miles converter if you need to go the other direction.
How accurate is this miles to yards conversion?
The calculator runs the formula in your browser and rounds results to 3 decimal places by default. Many length factors are exact by definition, but practical measurements still depend on rulers, survey tools, tolerances, and how the result will be used.