Minutes of Angle Conversion Guide
Why MOA Changes With Distance
A minutes of angle value describes a small angular change. It does not stay as one fixed inch amount. Its linear size grows as distance grows. That is why a calculator is helpful for optic setup, target notes, and range planning. At 100 yards, one true MOA equals about 1.047 inches. Many shooters also use shooter MOA, where one MOA is treated as exactly one inch at 100 yards.
What the Calculator Handles
This tool supports both standards. Enter the angle, range, and distance unit. The calculator converts the range to yards first. It then scales the selected MOA standard by distance. The result shows the total correction in inches. It also shows the value of one MOA at that same range.
Why Precision Matters
Small differences matter at longer distances. A two MOA hold is near 2.094 inches at 100 yards using true MOA. At 500 yards, the same hold becomes about 10.472 inches. Shooter MOA would show 10 inches. That gap may be small during casual use. It becomes more important for records, competition, and repeatable equipment checks.
Using Click Values
The optional click value field helps translate the answer into scope adjustments. A quarter MOA click means four clicks per MOA. If the entered correction is 1.5 MOA, the tool reports six clicks. You can also enter a measured impact error. The calculator estimates the MOA needed to move that error at the chosen range.
Linear and Angular Notes
Because the formula is angular, it works for elevation and windage. It can describe a vertical correction, a horizontal correction, or a group shift. Keep units consistent when reading the output. Inches are the final linear answer. Yards are used inside the standard MOA relationship. Metric distances are converted automatically, so a meter entry still follows the same angle rule. Rounding can be changed for clean reports or detailed tuning notes. This keeps field notes easier to compare across sessions later.
Saving Your Results
Use the example table to compare common ranges before entering your own data. Export buttons help save records. CSV is useful for spreadsheets. PDF is better for printing or sharing. Always confirm results with real target data. Range conditions, optic tracking, mount alignment, ammunition, and measurement error can change final performance.