Accurate conversion between kilometres per hour (km/h) and metres per second (m/s)
Convert kilometres per hour to metres per second instantly with precise calculations for 2026. Includes reverse m/s to km/h conversion, mph, fps, knots, full formula reference, and speed conversion tables.
Professional speed conversion for physics, engineering, sport, transport, and scientific applications
Convert kilometres per hour to metres per second using the exact factor: 1 km/h = 1 ÷ 3.6 m/s ≈ 0.27778 m/s. This comes directly from unit analysis — 1 km = 1,000 m and 1 hour = 3,600 seconds, so dividing by 3.6 gives the precise SI unit for speed. Our tool outputs m/s, mph, fps, knots, and km/min simultaneously for a complete multi-unit speed breakdown.
Switch seamlessly between km/h → m/s and m/s → km/h conversion modes. Whether you are working on a physics problem using SI units, reading a vehicle speed in km/h, analysing wind speed data, or converting athletic performance metrics, both directions are handled instantly from a single input with no manual calculation required.
Essential for physics and engineering calculations, sports science, meteorology, aviation, automotive performance, fluid dynamics, and any scientific context where SI unit m/s is required but the measured speed is in km/h. Understanding the km/h to m/s conversion is fundamental to kinematics equations and Newton's laws of motion in 2026.
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Kilometres per hour (km/h) is the most widely used unit of speed in everyday life across metric countries. It measures how many kilometres a moving object travels in one hour. Road speed limits, vehicle speedometers, weather wind speeds, and sports performance are almost universally reported in km/h in countries using the metric system. Despite being non-SI, km/h is accepted for use with the SI system and is the practical standard for transportation worldwide in 2026.
Metres per second (m/s) is the SI coherent unit for speed and velocity, derived directly from the SI base units of length (metre) and time (second). It is the required unit in all physics equations, including kinematics, Newton's laws, kinetic energy (KE = ½mv²), and wave equations. Converting from km/h to m/s is an essential step whenever measured speeds need to be entered into scientific formulas. For related time conversions used in physics and scheduling, see our days to minutes converter.
1 km/h = 1 ÷ 3.6 m/s = 0.27̄ m/s (0.2 recurring)
| km/h | m/s | mph | Knots (kn) | ft/s (fps) | km/min |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 km/h | 0.2778 m/s | 0.6214 mph | 0.5400 kn | 0.9113 fps | 0.01667 km/min |
| 5 km/h | 1.3889 m/s | 3.1069 mph | 2.6998 kn | 4.5567 fps | 0.08333 km/min |
| 10 km/h | 2.7778 m/s | 6.2137 mph | 5.3996 kn | 9.1134 fps | 0.16667 km/min |
| 20 km/h | 5.5556 m/s | 12.427 mph | 10.799 kn | 18.227 fps | 0.33333 km/min |
| 30 km/h | 8.3333 m/s | 18.641 mph | 16.199 kn | 27.340 fps | 0.5 km/min |
| 50 km/h | 13.889 m/s | 31.069 mph | 26.998 kn | 45.567 fps | 0.83333 km/min |
| 60 km/h | 16.667 m/s | 37.282 mph | 32.397 kn | 54.681 fps | 1.0 km/min |
| 80 km/h | 22.222 m/s | 49.710 mph | 43.197 kn | 72.907 fps | 1.3333 km/min |
| 100 km/h | 27.778 m/s | 62.137 mph | 53.996 kn | 91.134 fps | 1.6667 km/min |
| 110 km/h | 30.556 m/s | 68.351 mph | 59.396 kn | 100.247 fps | 1.8333 km/min |
| 120 km/h | 33.333 m/s | 74.565 mph | 64.795 kn | 109.361 fps | 2.0 km/min |
| 200 km/h | 55.556 m/s | 124.274 mph | 107.991 kn | 182.268 fps | 3.3333 km/min |
| 300 km/h | 83.333 m/s | 186.411 mph | 161.987 kn | 273.403 fps | 5.0 km/min |
The factor 3.6 comes directly from unit analysis: 1 km = 1,000 m and 1 hour = 3,600 seconds. So 1 km/h = 1,000 m ÷ 3,600 s = 1 ÷ 3.6 m/s. This is an exact mathematical relationship — no approximation involved. Multiplying by 3.6 reverses the conversion perfectly.
The metre per second (m/s) is the coherent SI unit for both speed and velocity. All fundamental physics equations — kinematics, kinetic energy, momentum, wave speed — require speed in m/s when using SI units. Converting km/h to m/s is the first and most critical step in any physics calculation involving measured transport or wind speeds.
Key speed benchmarks: walking pace ≈ 5 km/h = 1.39 m/s; city speed limit ≈ 50 km/h = 13.89 m/s; highway ≈ 100 km/h = 27.78 m/s; speed of sound ≈ 1,235 km/h = 343 m/s; speed of light ≈ 1,079,252,848 km/h = 299,792,458 m/s. These benchmarks make it easy to sanity-check any km/h to m/s conversion result.
1 km/h = 0.27778 m/s = 0.62137 mph = 0.53996 knots = 0.91134 ft/s
Mental shortcut: divide km/h by 3.6 to get m/s. For reverse: multiply m/s by 3.6 to get km/h. Example: 90 km/h ÷ 3.6 = 25 m/s exactly.
The km/h to m/s conversion is one of the most common unit conversions in physics and engineering. Follow these steps:
Walking: ~5 km/h = 1.39 m/s | Cycling: ~25 km/h = 6.94 m/s | City limit: 50 km/h = 13.89 m/s | Highway: 100 km/h = 27.78 m/s | Fast train: 300 km/h = 83.33 m/s | Sound: ~1,235 km/h = 343 m/s | Usain Bolt top speed: ~44.72 km/h = 12.42 m/s
The most frequent error is multiplying by 3.6 instead of dividing — always divide km/h by 3.6 to get m/s (not multiply). Another common mistake is confusing speed with velocity — speed is a scalar (magnitude only) while velocity is a vector (magnitude + direction); the conversion factor is the same, but the distinction matters in physics. Also, never confuse km/h with kph or kmh — all three abbreviations mean the same thing (kilometres per hour), but some older texts use different notation.
The km/h to m/s conversion is fundamental to physics education — virtually every kinematics and dynamics problem at school and university level requires speed in m/s. When a car brakes from 100 km/h (27.78 m/s) to rest, calculating the braking distance using v² = u² + 2as requires m/s as the input. In meteorology and wind engineering, wind speeds measured in km/h must be converted to m/s for use in aerodynamic force equations (F = ½ρAv²). For land area conversions relevant to engineering and construction projects, our acres to square yards converter is a useful companion tool.
In sports science, athlete speeds recorded by GPS or radar (typically in km/h) are converted to m/s for biomechanical analysis and performance modelling. In aviation, airspeed is measured in knots, but aircraft design calculations use m/s for aerodynamic computations. In automotive engineering, vehicle performance testing uses km/h for consumer reporting but m/s for internal calculations of drag, tyre dynamics, and crash simulation. Understanding this conversion is also critical for pressure conversions in fluid dynamics, where flow velocity appears in Bernoulli's equation alongside pressure in pascals.
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The National Institute of Standards and Technology provides authoritative definitions of the metre per second and all related speed units used in scientific, engineering, and commercial measurement worldwide.
Visit NIST →The metre per second (m/s) is the coherent SI unit for speed and velocity, required in all physics equations. The km/h to m/s conversion factor of 3.6 is exact, derived from 3,600 seconds per hour and 1,000 metres per kilometre.
Our km/h to m/s Tool →Explore our full library of free unit conversion tools for speed, pressure, weight, energy, area, time, and more. All tools are updated for 2026 standards and fully optimised for mobile use.
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