How many inches is a mil dot?
William Brown
Updated on May 26, 2026
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Just so, how big is a mil dot?
A “MIL” relates to the U.S. Military variation of a unit of angle known as a milliradian. The distance between the centers of any two adjacent dots on a MIL-Dot reticle scope equals 1 Mil, which is about 36" (or 1 yard) @ 1000 yards, or 3.6 inches @ 100 yards.
One may also ask, how many clicks is a mil? You can measure or see how many inches of adjustment you need on paper, convert number of inches to minutes, then convert adjustment that to clicks. Mil adjustments are usually 1/10 mil per click, making the math similar to when you use SI units(metric system).
Also Know, how many inches is a mil at 100 yards?
At 100 yards, 3.4377 MOA equals 3.599 inches (3.4377 x 1.047). Rounded up, one mil equals 3.6 inches at 100 yards. A mil is so large, it's broken it into tenths in order to make precise adjustments. If you have a riflescope with mil adjustments, each click equals 1⁄10 mil.
How many inches is a Mrad?
One MRAD = 3.6 inches at 100 yards = 7.2 inches at 200 yards. We were 2 MRADs to the left, so that equals 14.4 inches to the left. Each click on your turret is ¼ MOA at 100 yards = ½ MOA at 200 yards = ½ an inch.
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