Why 1 Kanal Equals 20 Marla in Pakistan
The math is simple, but the story behind it stretches back centuries — from Mughal walking paces to British cadastral surveys that still govern every property deed in Pakistan today.
(universal)
(base unit)
(standard)
(root length)
The short answer
Ask any property dealer in Lahore, Islamabad, or Rawalpindi and they will confirm it instantly: 1 Kanal = 20 Marla. This ratio holds across every city, every housing society, and every official land record in Pakistan. To convert, you simply multiply the number of Kanals by 20 — or divide a Marla count by 20 to get Kanals.
But why 20? The number is not arbitrary. It flows directly from a hierarchical measurement chain that begins with a single human pace recorded under British colonial administration.
The measurement chain: from pace to plot
Every unit in the Pakistani land-measurement system traces back to the Karam — a linear measure standardized at 5.5 feet (66 inches) during British rule. Build up from there and the 1 Kanal = 20 Marla equation becomes inevitable:
The full chain — from karam to acre
30.25 sq ft
272.25 sq ft
605 sq yd
4,840 sq yd
The British chose 9 Sarsai per Marla and 20 Marla per Kanal so that 8 Kanals would produce exactly one Imperial Acre — a unit already embedded in British administration worldwide. Everything interlocked with the Empire’s global land-revenue system.
Where these units come from
Pre-colonial era
The Karam (meaning “double pace”) and rough Marla-like units were already in informal use across Punjab for agricultural land division. Local zamindars used them to divide fields and assess crop-sharing obligations, but standards varied village by village.
1850s–1880s (British Raj)
The colonial administration launched systematic cadastral surveys — mapping and recording every plot of land for revenue collection. To do this efficiently across Punjab and NWFP (now KPK), they needed a single standard. They fixed the Karam at 66 inches and defined the hierarchy: 9 Sarsai = 1 Marla, 20 Marla = 1 Kanal, 8 Kanal = 1 Acre. This became official in land revenue records.
1901 (Jhelum Settlement Report)
Settlement Officer W. S. Talbot’s Final Report of the Revision of the Settlement of the Jhelum District formally documented: “9 square karams = 1 marla; 20 marlas = 1 kanal; 8 kanals = 1 ghumao = 1 acre.” This became one of the most cited colonial land records in the region.
1947 onward (Pakistan)
At independence, Pakistan inherited and retained the entire British land measurement system. The Acre-Kanal-Marla framework remains the legal standard for Punjab property records to this day, governed under the Pakistan Land Revenue Act.
1957 (standardisation)
The Bigha-Biswa system used in some regions was officially replaced by the standardised Acre-Kanal-Marla metric system across Pakistan’s Punjab, cementing the 20-Marla-per-Kanal ratio as the single legal standard.
“9 square karams = 1 marla; 20 marlas = 1 kanal = ½ rood; 8 kanals = 1 ghumao = 1 acre.”
— W. S. Talbot, Final Report of the Revision of the Settlement of the Jhelum District, 1901 (Lahore: Civil and Military Gazette Press)The mathematics, laid bare
The final figure — 4,840 square yards — is precisely one Imperial Acre, confirming that the entire chain was engineered to dovetail with the British imperial system. The 20-Marla-per-Kanal figure was not a cultural coincidence; it was a deliberate mathematical bridge between local custom and colonial administration.
Why the Marla size varies by city — but the ratio does not
Here is where confusion enters for most buyers. While 1 Kanal always equals 20 Marla, the absolute size of a Marla — measured in square feet — differs between cities and housing schemes. This happened because local authorities adapted the standard over decades for practical urban planning.
Islamabad / Standard
272.25 sq ft / marla
Kanal = 5,445 sq ft
Lahore
225 sq ft / marla
Kanal = 4,500 sq ft
Other regions
250 sq ft / marla
Kanal = 5,000 sq ft
Regardless of which city standard applies, you always multiply by 20 to convert Kanals to Marla or divide by 20 to go the other way. The ratio is universal; only the base square footage shifts.
Practical reference table
Key takeaways
The 1 Kanal = 20 Marla standard is not folklore — it is a mathematically engineered relationship standardised during British colonial land settlement, anchored to the Imperial Acre, and preserved unchanged in Pakistani land law since 1947. When you buy or sell property in Pakistan, this ratio is fixed and universal, even if the underlying square footage per Marla varies by location. Understanding the full chain — from the 5.5-foot Karam all the way up to the Acre — gives you the tools to verify any property measurement with confidence.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Sources & References