KPH to MPH Converter
Convert kilometers per hour to miles per hour and mph to kph instantly. Useful for speed, driving, and athletics. Accurate conversion, completely free.
KPH to MPH: The Exact Conversion Factor
One kilometer equals exactly 1,000 meters, and one mile equals exactly 1,609.344 meters (since 1959). Therefore:
- 1 km/h = 1,000/1,609.344 mph ≈ 0.621371 mph
- 1 mph = 1,609.344/1,000 km/h = 1.609344 km/h
The conversion is exact in the sense that 1 mile = 1,609.344 m is the defined value. To convert kph to mph, multiply by 0.621371. To convert mph to kph, multiply by 1.60934.
Quick mental estimate: multiply kph by 0.6 (underestimates by 3.5%). Or use the more accurate "multiply by 5 and divide by 8" shortcut: 80 km/h × 5 / 8 = 50 mph (exact: 49.71 mph). This fraction (5/8 = 0.625) is very close to the exact 0.6214 conversion factor.
KPH to MPH Conversion Chart
Complete reference table for common speed conversions in both directions:
| km/h | mph | Context | mph | km/h |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 6.2 | Slow cycling | 10 | 16.1 |
| 20 | 12.4 | Fast walking/slow jog | 15 | 24.1 |
| 30 | 18.6 | Urban speed limit (EU) | 20 | 32.2 |
| 40 | 24.9 | Urban street | 25 | 40.2 |
| 50 | 31.1 | EU city speed limit | 30 | 48.3 |
| 60 | 37.3 | Secondary road | 35 | 56.3 |
| 80 | 49.7 | Rural road (EU) | 40 | 64.4 |
| 100 | 62.1 | Highway (EU/AUS) | 45 | 72.4 |
| 110 | 68.4 | Highway (many countries) | 50 | 80.5 |
| 120 | 74.6 | Motorway (EU) | 55 | 88.5 |
| 130 | 80.8 | Autobahn (Germany, recommended) | 60 | 96.6 |
| 160 | 99.4 | US highway design speed | 65 | 104.6 |
| 200 | 124.3 | High-speed train | 70 | 112.7 |
| 300 | 186.4 | Very high-speed rail (TGV) | 80 | 128.7 |
Speed Limits Around the World
Understanding speed units is essential when driving abroad. The US and UK use mph; nearly all other countries use km/h. A speed limit sign showing "100" means very different things in these two systems.
| Country/Region | Unit | Urban Limit | Rural Limit | Motorway/Highway Limit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | mph | 25–35 mph (40–56 km/h) | 55–65 mph (88–105 km/h) | 65–85 mph (105–137 km/h) |
| United Kingdom | mph | 30 mph (48 km/h) | 60 mph (97 km/h) | 70 mph (113 km/h) |
| European Union | km/h | 50 km/h (31 mph) | 90 km/h (56 mph) | 120–130 km/h (75–81 mph) |
| Germany (Autobahn) | km/h | 50 km/h | 100 km/h | 130 km/h advisory (no general limit) |
| Australia | km/h | 50 km/h (31 mph) | 100–110 km/h | 110–130 km/h |
| Canada | km/h | 40–50 km/h | 80–100 km/h | 100–110 km/h |
A UK driver renting a car in the US will see speed limit signs in mph — a familiar unit. A German driver renting in the UK sees 70 mph motorway signs, which equals 113 km/h — not dramatically different from German motorway recommendations. The most confusing situation is a US or UK driver renting in a metric country, or vice versa, where signs showing "100" might mean 62 mph (km/h) or a literal 100 mph.
Running and Athletic Speeds in KPH and MPH
For runners and athletes, speed in km/h and mph relates closely to training pace (time per kilometer or mile). Understanding these relationships helps when comparing running speeds across different units and training systems.
| Speed | km/h | mph | Min/km Pace | Min/mile Pace | Athlete Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Casual walk | 5 km/h | 3.1 mph | 12:00/km | 19:21/mi | — |
| Brisk walk | 6–7 km/h | 3.7–4.4 mph | 8:34–10:00/km | 13:45–16:06/mi | — |
| Easy jog | 8–10 km/h | 5.0–6.2 mph | 6:00–7:30/km | 9:41–12:00/mi | Beginner runner |
| Recreational runner | 10–12 km/h | 6.2–7.5 mph | 5:00–6:00/km | 8:03–9:41/mi | Regular runner |
| Sub-5 min/km pace | 12 km/h | 7.5 mph | 5:00/km | 8:03/mi | Competitive amateur |
| Sub-4 min/km pace | 15 km/h | 9.3 mph | 4:00/km | 6:26/mi | Serious club runner |
| Elite marathon pace | 20.2 km/h | 12.5 mph | 2:58/km | 4:47/mi | World-class |
| World record marathon | 20.7 km/h | 12.9 mph | 2:54/km | 4:40/mi | Eliud Kipchoge 2:01:09 |
| 100m sprint (Bolt) | 44.7 km/h | 27.8 mph | 1:20/km | 2:10/mi | World record |
Treadmill speeds are typically displayed in km/h in most of the world and mph in the US. A pace of 10 km/h (6.2 mph) on a treadmill corresponds to a 6-minute per kilometer pace — a comfortable jogging speed for recreational runners. Most treadmills also display an incline that can compensate for the lack of air resistance; a 1% incline is commonly recommended to simulate outdoor running.
Vehicle Speeds and Transportation Context
Speed matters across transportation modes, and converting between km/h and mph helps make sense of specifications across different markets.
Cars and motorcycles: Speedometers in the US display mph as the primary unit; most other countries use km/h. Internationally sold vehicles often include dual-scale speedometers. Maximum speed records are commonly reported in both: the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport has a top speed of 431.072 km/h (267.857 mph), and the ThrustSSC land speed record is 1,228 km/h (763 mph).
Aviation: Airspeed is measured in knots (nautical miles per hour). 1 knot = 1.852 km/h = 1.151 mph. Commercial jets cruise at approximately 900 km/h (560 mph = 486 knots). The speed of sound at sea level is about 1,235 km/h (767 mph = 667 knots).
Maritime: Ship speeds are always in knots. A large container ship cruises at 20–25 knots (37–46 km/h / 23–29 mph). The Queen Mary 2 ocean liner has a service speed of 26 knots (48 km/h / 30 mph).
High-speed rail: The TGV in France typically runs at 320 km/h (199 mph). Japan's Shinkansen operates at 320 km/h (199 mph) commercially. China's Maglev test train reached 600 km/h (373 mph) in trials. These figures need km/h-to-mph conversion for comparison with US audiences accustomed to mph.
Wind Speed, Weather, and the Beaufort Scale
Weather forecasts and meteorology use km/h in most countries, but mph in the US and UK. The Beaufort scale describes wind intensity in terms of observable effects:
| Beaufort Number | Description | km/h | mph | Observable Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Calm | <1 | <1 | Smoke rises vertically |
| 3 | Gentle breeze | 12–19 | 7–12 | Leaves in motion |
| 5 | Fresh breeze | 29–38 | 18–24 | Small trees sway |
| 7 | Near gale | 50–61 | 31–38 | Walking difficult |
| 9 | Strong gale | 75–88 | 47–54 | Structural damage |
| 12 | Hurricane force | ≥118 | ≥73 | Widespread devastation |
Hurricane and typhoon categories also use both units. A Category 1 hurricane has sustained winds of 119–153 km/h (74–95 mph); a Category 5 exceeds 252 km/h (157 mph). Converting between units helps international communication during weather emergencies and when reading international weather reports.
Converting Pace to Speed and Back
Runners often think in terms of pace (time per unit distance) rather than speed. Converting between pace and speed in mixed units requires understanding the reciprocal relationship:
- Speed (km/h) = 60 / pace (min/km)
- Pace (min/km) = 60 / speed (km/h)
- Speed (mph) = 60 / pace (min/mile)
- Pace (min/mile) = 60 / speed (mph)
Example conversions: A 5:00/km pace = 60/5 = 12 km/h = 7.46 mph. A 9:00/mile pace = 60/9 = 6.67 mph = 10.7 km/h.
To convert between min/km and min/mile: multiply min/km by 1.60934 to get min/mile (since 1 mile = 1.60934 km). A 5:00/km pace × 1.60934 = 8:03/mile. To go the other direction: multiply min/mile by 0.62137 to get min/km. A 10:00/mile × 0.62137 = 6:12/km.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert kph to mph quickly in my head?
Multiply by 0.6 for a rough estimate (3.5% low). More accurate: multiply by 5 and divide by 8 (5/8 = 0.625, about 0.6% high). Example: 80 km/h → 80 × 5 / 8 = 50 mph (exact: 49.71 mph). For dashboard glancing: 100 km/h ≈ 62 mph; 50 km/h ≈ 31 mph; 130 km/h ≈ 81 mph.
What is 100 mph in km/h?
100 mph × 1.60934 = 160.93 km/h ≈ 161 km/h. This is well above motorway speed limits in most countries. 100 mph is also 87 knots (nautical miles per hour), since 1 knot = 1.15078 mph.
Is 60 kph the same as 60 mph?
No. 60 kph = 37.3 mph (about 60% of 60). 60 mph = 96.6 km/h. They sound like the same number but represent very different speeds — 60 mph is 60% faster than 60 kph. This confusion is important to remember when driving in a country that uses different units.
What speed is the autobahn's recommended limit in mph?
Germany's autobahn recommended advisory speed is 130 km/h = 80.78 mph ≈ 81 mph. There is no hard speed limit on approximately 30% of autobahn sections, though some sections have dynamic limits. Studies show average travel speeds on unrestricted sections are 125–130 km/h despite no legal maximum.
How fast do marathon runners run in km/h?
Elite marathon runners maintain approximately 20–21 km/h (12.4–13.1 mph). The world record pace of Eliud Kipchoge (2:01:09) is 20.7 km/h (12.9 mph) — faster than most people's 5K pace, sustained for over 2 hours. Recreational marathon finishers typically average 9–12 km/h (5.6–7.5 mph).
How fast is a knot in km/h and mph?
1 knot = 1 nautical mile per hour = 1.852 km/h = 1.15078 mph. Knots are used in aviation and maritime navigation. A Boeing 737 cruises at approximately 485 knots = 898 km/h = 558 mph. Weather stations near coastlines sometimes report wind speeds in knots.
What is the speed of light in km/h and mph?
The speed of light in a vacuum is exactly 299,792,458 m/s = 1,079,252,848.8 km/h ≈ 1.08 billion km/h = 670,616,629 mph ≈ 671 million mph. Nothing with mass can reach this speed, but it provides useful perspective: light from the Sun reaches Earth in approximately 8 minutes 20 seconds, having traveled 150 million km.
How do treadmill speed settings relate to running pace?
Treadmill speed in km/h converts to running pace: pace (min/km) = 60 ÷ speed (km/h). Common treadmill settings: 8 km/h = 7:30/km pace (easy jog); 10 km/h = 6:00/km (comfortable running); 12 km/h = 5:00/km (moderate effort); 15 km/h = 4:00/km (fast); 20 km/h = 3:00/km (sprinting). In mph: 5 mph = 9:41/mile; 6 mph = 10:00/km equivalent ≈ 6:12/km; 7 mph = 8:34/mile.
How does wind speed affect runners?
Wind resistance increases with the square of speed. At 10 km/h running pace, a 30 km/h headwind adds about 10% to energy cost. At 20 km/h (elite pace), the same headwind adds about 8%. Tailwinds partially offset this but don't provide a perfect mirror benefit due to drafting effects. The IAAF allows a maximum of 2.0 m/s (7.2 km/h = 4.5 mph) following wind for sprint world records — above this, records aren't recognized.
What is the difference between speed and velocity?
Speed is a scalar (magnitude only): 60 km/h. Velocity is a vector (magnitude and direction): 60 km/h due north. In everyday usage they're interchangeable, but in physics, the distinction matters. Average speed = total distance ÷ total time; average velocity = total displacement ÷ total time. A runner completing a 400m lap returns to the starting point — average velocity is 0 (displacement = 0) but average speed is non-zero.
Physics of Speed: Kinetic Energy and Stopping Distance
Speed has a profound nonlinear impact on safety. Kinetic energy increases with the square of velocity: KE = ½mv². Doubling speed quadruples kinetic energy. This is why speed limits exist and why exceeding them even slightly increases crash severity dramatically.
Stopping distance = reaction distance + braking distance. Reaction distance is roughly linear (at 60 mph, a 1.5-second reaction time = 132 feet / 40 m). Braking distance increases with speed squared. Going from 30 mph to 60 mph doesn't double stopping distance — it approximately quadruples it.
| Speed | km/h | Reaction Distance (1.5s) | Braking Distance | Total Stopping Distance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 mph | 48 km/h | 66 ft (20 m) | 45 ft (14 m) | 111 ft (34 m) |
| 50 mph | 80 km/h | 110 ft (34 m) | 125 ft (38 m) | 235 ft (72 m) |
| 70 mph | 113 km/h | 154 ft (47 m) | 245 ft (75 m) | 399 ft (122 m) |
| 100 mph | 161 km/h | 220 ft (67 m) | 500 ft (152 m) | 720 ft (219 m) |
These figures explain why urban speed limits of 30 km/h (20 mph) near schools are effective: at 20 mph, a struck pedestrian has approximately 5% fatality risk; at 30 mph the risk jumps to 45%; at 40 mph to 85%. The physics of kinetic energy makes every mph and every km/h significant in crash outcomes.
Historical Context: How mph and km/h Became Standard
The mile originates from the Roman "mille passuum" (thousand paces), defined as 1,000 double steps of a Roman legionary — approximately 1,480 meters. The English statute mile of 5,280 feet was standardized by an Act of Parliament in 1593. The modern international mile = 1,609.344 meters has been exact since 1959.
The kilometer emerged from the metric system developed during the French Revolution. The meter was defined as one ten-millionth of the distance from the North Pole to the equator through Paris. The kilometer (1,000 meters) became the standard distance unit as metric adoption spread through Europe and the world in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Today, the United States is one of only three countries not officially using the metric system (along with Myanmar and Liberia). The US Metric Conversion Act of 1975 encouraged voluntary metrication; the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 designated the metric system as the "preferred system of weights and measures for US trade and commerce." Yet highway signage and daily life in the US remain firmly in miles and mph, making kph-to-mph conversion an everyday need for international travelers.
Speed in Nature and Biology
Speed measurements in km/h and mph help compare the performance of humans, animals, and machines. The natural world provides a remarkable range of speeds that benefit from unit conversion for comparison.
| Animal / Object | Speed (km/h) | Speed (mph) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garden snail | 0.05 km/h | 0.03 mph | World's slowest common animal |
| Human walk | 5 km/h | 3.1 mph | Average comfortable walking pace |
| Human sprint (Bolt) | 44.7 km/h | 27.8 mph | 100m world record peak speed |
| Greyhound | 74 km/h | 46 mph | Fastest dog breed |
| Cheetah (sprint) | 112 km/h | 70 mph | Fastest land animal |
| Peregrine falcon (dive) | 389 km/h | 242 mph | Fastest animal movement |
| Sailfish | 110 km/h | 68 mph | Fastest fish in water |
Understanding that a cheetah at 112 km/h (70 mph) is running at typical US highway speed helps internalize just how extraordinary that biological achievement is. A human sprinter at 44.7 km/h would be a moderate city driving speed in Europe — and represents the absolute peak of human locomotion. The peregrine falcon's 389 km/h diving speed exceeds the takeoff speed of most small aircraft.