Speed Converter: Convert Between All Speed Units
The Speed Converter is a free online tool that lets you instantly convert speed values between metric, imperial, nautical, and scientific units. Whether you need to convert kilometers per hour to miles per hour for a road trip, calculate Mach numbers for an aerospace project, or express a speed as a fraction of the speed of light for a physics problem, this tool handles it with real-time results and adjustable decimal precision.
All conversions are performed client-side using precise, internationally standardized conversion factors. Enter a value in any supported unit and every other unit updates simultaneously — no button presses required.
Supported Speed Units
The converter supports 10 units across four categories, covering everyday use through advanced scientific applications.
Metric Units
- Meters per Second (m/s) — The SI base unit of speed, used in physics, engineering, and scientific contexts worldwide.
- Kilometers per Hour (km/h) — The most widely used road speed unit globally, standard on speedometers in most countries.
- Centimeters per Second (cm/s) — Common in laboratory physics, fluid dynamics, and slow-motion analysis.
- Millimeters per Second (mm/s) — Used in precision mechanical engineering, robotics, and vibration measurement.
Imperial Units
- Miles per Hour (mph) — The standard road speed unit in the United States and United Kingdom, also used in sports timing.
- Feet per Second (ft/s) — Common in US engineering, ballistics, structural analysis, and some aviation contexts.
- Inches per Second (in/s) — Used in mechanical engineering for actuator speeds, conveyor belt speeds, and slow precision movements.
Nautical and Aviation
- Knots (kt) — One nautical mile per hour (1.852 km/h exactly). The universal standard for ship and aircraft speeds, and also used in meteorology for wind speeds.
Scientific Units
- Mach Number — A dimensionless ratio of an object's speed to the speed of sound. This tool uses the speed of sound at sea level in dry air at 20°C, which is 343 m/s (1235 km/h or 767 mph). Mach 1 is the sound barrier, Mach 2 is twice the speed of sound, and so on.
- Speed of Light (c) — The ultimate speed limit in the universe, equal to 299,792,458 m/s in a vacuum. Expressing speeds as a fraction of c is essential in particle physics, astrophysics, and special relativity calculations.
How Speed Conversion Works
Every conversion normalizes the input through a single base unit — meters per second (m/s). The input value is first multiplied by its conversion factor to obtain the equivalent in m/s, then divided by the target unit's conversion factor to reach the final result. This two-step approach guarantees consistent accuracy regardless of which pair of units you are converting between.
For example, converting 100 km/h to mph works as follows:
- 100 km/h × (1 ÷ 3.6) = 27.7778 m/s
- 27.7778 m/s ÷ 0.44704 = 62.137 mph
Key Conversion Reference Values
- 1 km/h = 0.277778 m/s = 0.621371 mph
- 1 mph = 1.60934 km/h = 0.44704 m/s
- 1 knot = 1.852 km/h = 1.15078 mph = 0.514444 m/s
- Mach 1 = 343 m/s = 1235 km/h = 767 mph (at sea level)
- Speed of light = 299,792,458 m/s ≈ 1.079 billion km/h
- 1 ft/s = 0.3048 m/s = 1.09728 km/h
Practical Applications
Speed conversion arises across many real-world fields:
- Transportation: Comparing road speed limits between countries that use km/h and those that use mph; calculating fuel efficiency at different speeds; planning journey times.
- Aviation and Maritime: Pilots and sailors use knots for all speed and navigation calculations. Converting between knots, km/h, and mph is routine when coordinating with ground teams or reading international charts.
- Aerospace and Defence: Aircraft performance is expressed in Mach numbers. Knowing that a jet cruises at Mach 0.85 (about 1020 km/h at cruise altitude) or that a missile travels at Mach 3 requires fast unit conversion.
- Physics and Engineering: Scientific calculations use SI units (m/s), while industrial specifications in the US may use ft/s or mph. Converting between these correctly is critical for safety margins in structural and mechanical design.
- Sports: Sprint speeds in athletics are often quoted in m/s or km/h; American sports favor mph; cycling and rowing frequently use both. Quick conversion helps compare performances across regions.
- Astrophysics: Stellar velocities, orbital speeds, and expansion rates of the universe are conveniently expressed as fractions of c, making the speed of light unit indispensable for cosmological calculations.
Understanding Mach Number in More Depth
The Mach number was named after the Austrian physicist Ernst Mach. It describes how many times faster an object is moving than the local speed of sound. Because the speed of sound varies with air temperature, altitude, and the medium the sound travels through, Mach numbers are context-dependent. This tool uses the standard sea-level reference value of 343 m/s.
- Subsonic: Below Mach 1 (less than 343 m/s at sea level)
- Transonic: Around Mach 0.8 to Mach 1.2
- Supersonic: Mach 1 to Mach 5
- Hypersonic: Above Mach 5
- High-hypersonic: Above Mach 10 (re-entry vehicles)
Tips for Using the Speed Converter
- Enable "Show all unit conversions" to see every supported unit at once, grouped by category — ideal for quick reference tables.
- Increase decimal places when working with very small fractions of the speed of light or precise engineering tolerances.
- Use the Swap button to quickly reverse a conversion — for example, to check how a given mph value compares in km/h and back again.
- The conversion history panel records your last 10 conversions during the session, so you can refer back or click an entry to reload it.
- For very large or very small results the tool automatically switches to scientific notation to keep the display readable.