Focal Length Calculator

Calculate the ideal focal length for any sensor, field of view, or subject framing requirement. Compare lenses across sensor formats.

About the Focal Length Calculator

Choosing the right focal length is one of the most important decisions in photography. The focal length determines your field of view, perspective compression, and how subjects appear relative to their backgrounds. Different genres demand different ranges: 14–24mm for architecture, 35–50mm for street photography, 85–135mm for portraits, and 200–600mm for wildlife.

This calculator works in reverse from the desired field of view or subject coverage to determine the required focal length. Enter how wide a scene you need to capture at a given distance, and it computes the exact focal length needed on your sensor format. Alternatively, enter a known focal length to see what it covers.

The tool is invaluable for lens shopping decisions, surveillance system design, and pre-production planning in film. It accounts for sensor size through crop factor, so you can directly compare how the same scene would be captured by different camera systems. A 35mm lens on APS-C covers the same field as a 52.5mm on full-frame—this calculator makes those conversions instant.

For photographers upgrading or switching systems, the cross-format equivalence table shows exactly which lenses in the new system match your current kit's coverage. No more guessing whether a 16mm on M4/3 is wide enough to replace your 24mm on full-frame.

Why Use This Focal Length Calculator?

Selecting the right focal length before purchasing a lens saves money and ensures the tool matches your needs. This calculator takes the guesswork out of lens selection by showing exact coverage at any distance. This tool is designed for quick, accurate results without manual computation. Whether you are a student working through coursework, a professional verifying a result, or an educator preparing examples, accurate answers are always just a few keystrokes away.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select your sensor format or enter custom sensor dimensions.
  2. Choose calculation mode: find focal length from desired coverage, or find coverage from focal length.
  3. Enter the subject distance and desired coverage width (or focal length).
  4. Review the computed focal length and the corresponding field of view.
  5. Compare standard focal lengths in the reference table.
  6. Use the cross-format equivalence to match lenses between systems.

Formula

Focal Length = sensor_width / (2 × tan(FOV_horizontal / 2)). FOV = 2 × arctan(sensor_width / (2 × focal_length)). Coverage = 2 × distance × tan(FOV / 2).

Example Calculation

Result: 36.8mm focal length needed

To cover 5 meters of width at 10 meters distance on a full-frame sensor, you need approximately a 36.8mm focal length. A 35mm lens would be the closest standard option.

Tips & Best Practices

Focal Length and Photographic Genre

Different genres have established focal length conventions through decades of practice. Photojournalism: 28–35mm for immersive, in-the-action shots. Street photography: 35–50mm for a natural perspective that doesn't draw attention. Portrait: 85–135mm to compress features pleasingly and separate subjects from backgrounds. Sports: 200–400mm to reach the action from sidelines. Wildlife: 400–800mm for frame-filling shots of distant animals.

The Math Behind Focal Length

Focal length is defined as the distance from the lens's optical center to the sensor when focused at infinity. Shorter focal lengths bend light more aggressively, capturing a wider angle. The relationship between focal length (f), sensor dimension (d), and field of view (θ) is: θ = 2 × arctan(d / 2f). This is an exact geometric relationship, not an approximation.

Practical Lens Kit Planning

A common approach to building a lens kit is to cover ranges without gaps: 16–35mm (wide), 35–70mm (standard), 70–200mm (telephoto). Use this calculator at representative shooting distances to verify that your kit covers all the framing you need. Many photographers find they can simplify to 2–3 prime lenses once they know their actual most-used focal lengths.

Frequently Asked Questions

What focal length is equivalent to human vision?

The human eye's central vision is roughly equivalent to a 50mm lens on full-frame, though our peripheral vision extends much wider (about 120° binocular). Understanding this concept helps you apply the calculator correctly and interpret the results with confidence.

What focal length for portraits?

Classic portrait focal lengths are 85–135mm on full-frame. These provide flattering perspective compression without requiring excessive distance from the subject.

Does focal length affect perspective?

Focal length itself doesn't change perspective—distance does. But since longer focal lengths typically mean shooting from farther away, they indirectly produce the “compressed” perspective look. Understanding this concept helps you apply the calculator correctly and interpret the results with confidence.

What is a “normal” focal length?

A normal lens roughly equals the sensor diagonal: ~43mm for full-frame, ~28mm for APS-C, ~22mm for M4/3. The actual standard lenses are 50mm, 35mm, and 25mm respectively.

How do I choose between a zoom and a prime?

Primes are typically sharper, faster (wider aperture), and lighter for a given focal length. Zooms offer versatility. Use this calculator to determine which focal lengths you actually need.

What focal length for real estate photography?

Wide-angle lenses of 16\u201324mm (full-frame equivalent) are standard for real estate to make rooms appear spacious while still looking natural. Use this as a practical reminder before finalizing the result.

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