Dimension of 2×4 (Quick Guide)

The real, finished dimension of a 2×4 is 1.5 inches by 3.5 inches. In metric, that equals 38 mm by 89 mm. The label “2×4” is nominal (the rough-cut name) and is larger than the final size after drying and planing.

Quick Answer

2×4 actual dimension: 1.5 in × 3.5 in (38 mm × 89 mm)

2×4 nominal dimension: 2 in × 4 in (before drying/planing)

Exact Dimensions Table

Dimension Inches (Actual) Millimeters Centimeters
Thickness 1.5 38 3.81
Width 3.5 89 8.89

Why the Dimension Is Smaller Than the Name

Lumber is sawn at its nominal size, then kiln-dried and planed smooth (S4S). That process removes material from each face, giving the final, standardized size of 1.5″ × 3.5″ for a 2×4 in U.S./Canadian framing lumber.

Conversions & Formula

  • Inches → millimeters: mm = inches × 25.4
  • 1.5 in × 25.4 = 38.1 mm → 38 mm (rounded)
  • 3.5 in × 25.4 = 88.9 mm → 89 mm (rounded)

Related Pages

FAQ: Dimension of a 2×4

Is every 2×4 exactly 1.5 in × 3.5 in?

Yes for standard surfaced framing lumber. Small, acceptable variation can occur from mill tolerances and moisture.

Do pressure-treated 2x4s have the same dimensions?

Yes. They are surfaced to the same finished size; freshly treated boards can shrink slightly as they dry.

What about rough-sawn (“green”) 2x4s?

Rough-sawn pieces can be closer to the nominal dimension (around 1.75 in × 3.75 in). Retail framing lumber is typically surfaced to 1.5 in × 3.5 in.

Key Takeaway

The dimension of a 2×4 you actually build with is 1.5″ × 3.5″ (38 × 89 mm) — plan cuts and layouts using the actual size, not the nominal label.