A “meteor” can be tiny or enormous, depending on what kind you mean, but most are surprisingly small.

Quick Scoop: How big is a meteor?

When people say “meteor,” they usually mean the streak of light in the sky. The solid object itself is called a meteoroid before it hits, and a meteorite if it reaches the ground.

Typical sizes

  • Many meteors are from dust grains to sand-sized particles, just fractions of a millimeter to a few millimeters across.
  • A lot of the “shooting stars” you see are only about 1 mm to 1 cm wide, and they completely burn up high in the atmosphere.
  • To have a decent chance of any piece reaching the ground, the meteoroid usually needs to be around marble-sized or larger (a few centimeters).

Bigger, brighter meteors

  • Bright fireballs and bolides often come from objects a few centimeters to tens of centimeters across.
  • Very bright, sound-producing events usually start with objects around 10 cm to 1 m in size.
  • Some dramatic modern events, like the 2013 Chelyabinsk explosion over Russia, came from an object roughly 20 m wide before it broke apart.

From pebble to world‑killer

You can think of it like this:

  • Grain of sand: common meteor in a shower, burns up completely.
  • Marble to football: can produce a bright fireball, sometimes small meteorites.
  • Car‑ to house‑size (meters across): can cause significant airbursts or small craters.
  • Tens of meters to kilometers: rare, but these are the impactors that can cause regional to global damage.

Simple rule of thumb

If you see a quick, ordinary “shooting star,” it was probably no bigger than a grain of sand to a pea. If it lights up the whole sky, casts shadows, or creates a shockwave, you’re likely looking at something from roughly basketball-size up to many meters across.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.