Accurate speed conversion between miles per hour (mph) and kilometres per hour (km/h)
Convert mph to km/h instantly with precise calculations. Includes reverse km/h to mph conversion, metres per second, feet per second, and knots outputs, full formula reference, and speed conversion tables for 2026.
Professional speed conversion for driving, athletics, aviation, weather, and engineering applications
Convert miles per hour to kilometres per hour using the exact factor of 1 mph = 1.609344 km/h, derived from the internationally defined statute mile (1,609.344 metres exactly). Our tool delivers precise results across six speed units simultaneously — km/h, mph, m/s, ft/s, knots, and Mach — giving you a complete multi-unit breakdown from a single input value with no rounding errors.
Switch seamlessly between mph to km/h and km/h to mph conversion modes. Whether you are reading a US speed limit sign in mph and need the km/h equivalent for reference, converting an athletic pace, interpreting a vehicle speedometer from a hire car, or comparing international speed records, both directions are covered instantly from a single input value without manual calculation.
Essential for international road travel, automotive engineering, athletic performance tracking, aviation and maritime speed reporting, weather forecasting, motorsport, and any field where imperial and metric speed systems must be reconciled. Particularly valuable for Australian, European, and Canadian users interpreting US speed limits, and for US users travelling internationally, in 2026.
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Miles per hour (mph) is the standard unit of speed for road travel in the United States and United Kingdom, as well as a handful of other countries. Kilometres per hour (km/h) is the metric equivalent, used as the standard road speed unit across Australia, Europe, Canada, and most of the rest of the world. Both units measure the same physical quantity — distance travelled per unit time — and the conversion between them applies the same exact factor as the mile-to-kilometre length conversion: 1 mph = 1.609344 km/h, defined precisely in 1959.
Because km/h values are numerically larger than the equivalent mph by a factor of approximately 1.6, drivers crossing from metric to imperial countries (or vice versa) must convert carefully to avoid significant speed misinterpretation. A posted limit of 100 km/h (common in Australia, Europe, and Canada) equals 62.1 mph — well below the US Interstate speed limit of 70–75 mph (113–121 km/h) on many routes. Understanding these differences is critical for road safety, vehicle calibration, and competitive athletics. The conversion factor derives from the SI unit system as defined by NIST.
1 mph = 1.609344 km/h = 0.44704 m/s = 1.46667 ft/s = 0.868976 knots = 0.001303 Mach — all representing the exact same speed in different unit systems used worldwide.
The table below covers the most commonly needed speed values in road travel, athletics, aviation, and motorsport in 2026. For related distance conversions, see our Miles to Kilometres Converter.
| mph | km/h | m/s | ft/s | Knots | Common Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 mph | 8.047 km/h | 2.235 m/s | 7.333 ft/s | 4.345 kn | Brisk walking pace |
| 10 mph | 16.093 km/h | 4.470 m/s | 14.667 ft/s | 8.690 kn | Cycling leisurely |
| 20 mph | 32.187 km/h | 8.941 m/s | 29.333 ft/s | 17.380 kn | Urban speed limit (UK/US) |
| 25 mph | 40.234 km/h | 11.176 m/s | 36.667 ft/s | 21.724 kn | Residential area (US) |
| 30 mph | 48.280 km/h | 13.411 m/s | 44.000 ft/s | 26.069 kn | Urban limit (US/UK) |
| 40 mph | 64.374 km/h | 17.882 m/s | 58.667 ft/s | 34.759 kn | Semi-rural road (US/UK) |
| 50 mph | 80.467 km/h | 22.352 m/s | 73.333 ft/s | 43.448 kn | Open road (US/UK) |
| 55 mph | 88.514 km/h | 24.587 m/s | 80.667 ft/s | 47.794 kn | US highway minimum |
| 60 mph | 96.561 km/h | 26.822 m/s | 88.000 ft/s | 52.138 kn | Common US highway speed |
| 62.137 mph | 100.000 km/h | 27.778 m/s | 91.134 ft/s | 53.996 kn | 100 km/h exactly (AU/EU) |
| 65 mph | 104.607 km/h | 29.057 m/s | 95.333 ft/s | 56.483 kn | US Interstate speed limit |
| 70 mph | 112.654 km/h | 31.293 m/s | 102.667 ft/s | 60.828 kn | UK motorway limit |
| 75 mph | 120.701 km/h | 33.528 m/s | 110.000 ft/s | 65.173 kn | US highway limit (some states) |
| 80.778 mph | 130.000 km/h | 36.111 m/s | 118.477 ft/s | 70.194 kn | EU motorway limit |
| 100 mph | 160.934 km/h | 44.704 m/s | 146.667 ft/s | 86.898 kn | High-speed road / motorsport |
| 200 mph | 321.869 km/h | 89.408 m/s | 293.333 ft/s | 173.795 kn | Top Fuel dragster / MotoGP |
Use this reverse table when reading speed limits, vehicle specifications, or weather reports in km/h and needing to understand the equivalent mph value for comparison or compliance.
| km/h | mph | m/s | Knots | Common Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 km/h | 6.214 mph | 2.778 m/s | 5.400 kn | Walking speed |
| 30 km/h | 18.641 mph | 8.333 m/s | 16.199 kn | School zone limit (AU) |
| 40 km/h | 24.855 mph | 11.111 m/s | 21.599 kn | Residential area (AU) |
| 50 km/h | 31.069 mph | 13.889 m/s | 26.998 kn | Default urban limit (AU) |
| 60 km/h | 37.282 mph | 16.667 m/s | 32.397 kn | Arterial road (AU) |
| 80 km/h | 49.710 mph | 22.222 m/s | 43.197 kn | Rural road (AU) |
| 90 km/h | 55.923 mph | 25.000 m/s | 48.597 kn | Motorway (some EU countries) |
| 100 km/h | 62.137 mph | 27.778 m/s | 53.996 kn | Open road limit (AU/EU) |
| 110 km/h | 68.351 mph | 30.556 m/s | 59.395 kn | Freeway limit (AU) |
| 120 km/h | 74.565 mph | 33.333 m/s | 64.795 kn | Motorway limit (some EU) |
| 130 km/h | 80.778 mph | 36.111 m/s | 70.194 kn | Motorway limit (FR/DE/IT) |
| 300 km/h | 186.411 mph | 83.333 m/s | 161.987 kn | High-speed train (TGV/Shinkansen) |
Converting between mph and km/h is one of the most safety-critical unit conversions in everyday life, affecting drivers, athletes, pilots, and engineers worldwide.
Australia's default urban speed limit is 50 km/h (31.1 mph), with 100–110 km/h (62.1–68.4 mph) on freeways. The US uses 25–30 mph (40–48 km/h) in urban zones and 65–75 mph (104–121 km/h) on Interstates. Hire car speedometers in the US display mph while Australian drivers are accustomed to km/h, making real-time conversion essential for road safety. Even a 10 km/h misinterpretation can result in significant speeding or dangerous under-speed on high-speed roads.
Formula 1 cars reach top speeds of approximately 370 km/h (230 mph) on straights. MotoGP bikes exceed 350 km/h (217 mph). Vehicle performance specifications — 0–60 mph in 3.0 seconds, top speed 200 mph — are published in mph in the US and UK, but Australian, European, and Asian automotive media and buyers reference km/h. Engineers, journalists, and enthusiasts convert between both constantly when reading global car reviews and technical specifications in 2026.
Aircraft airspeed is measured in knots (nautical miles per hour) internationally, but cockpit instruments on older US aircraft display indicated airspeed in mph, while modern international aircraft use knots and km/h depending on region. General aviation pilots in Australia operating under CASA regulations reference km/h for ground speed reporting, while ICAO international procedures use knots. Converting between mph, km/h, and knots is a routine competency for pilots worldwide in 2026.
Running pace and speed are expressed differently by country: US runners use miles per hour and min/mile pace, while Australian and European runners use km/h and min/km pace. A runner completing a 5K in 20 minutes runs at 15 km/h (9.32 mph). Training apps like Strava and Garmin Connect allow unit switching, but understanding the conversion helps athletes compare personal bests, training paces, and race results across international events and coaching programs in 2026.
Wind speed and storm intensity are reported in different units depending on the issuing agency. The Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) reports wind in km/h and knots, while US National Weather Service reports use mph and knots. A cyclone with 130 km/h (80.8 mph) winds is classified as a Category 2 tropical cyclone in Australia. Converting between mph and km/h is essential for interpreting international weather warnings, storm forecasts, and wind energy assessments in 2026.
High-speed rail services report maximum operating speeds in km/h for international standards: France's TGV operates at up to 320 km/h (199 mph), Japan's Shinkansen at 320 km/h (199 mph), and China's Fuxing trains at 350 km/h (217 mph). The UK HS2 project specifies speeds in mph for domestic documents but km/h for EU comparisons. Engineers, planners, and journalists working across these systems convert constantly between mph and km/h for accurate performance reporting and comparison.
The simplest mental trick for converting mph to km/h is to multiply by 1.6 (slightly underestimates by 0.57%). For better accuracy, use multiply by 8 then divide by 5: 60 mph × 8 = 480, ÷ 5 = 96 km/h (exact: 96.56 km/h). For km/h to mph, multiply by 0.6 or divide by 1.6. A key reference pair to memorise: 100 km/h ≈ 62 mph — useful as a mental anchor for Australian freeway speeds when visiting the US or UK. Also: 50 km/h ≈ 31 mph, 110 km/h ≈ 68 mph, 130 km/h ≈ 81 mph.
Converting mph to km/h requires a single multiplication. Here is the complete step-by-step process including all related speed units.
The most dangerous error is treating mph and km/h values as interchangeable — driving at 100 mph when a sign reads 100 km/h (62 mph) would mean exceeding the limit by 61%. Always confirm which unit a speed limit, specification, or instrument uses before relying on the value. A secondary common mistake is confusing knots (nautical miles per hour = 1.852 km/h) with km/h — these differ by 85.2%, and using the wrong unit in aviation or maritime contexts is a serious safety hazard. Also note that Mach number varies with altitude and temperature — the conversion above is valid at sea level, 20°C standard conditions only.
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Miles per hour is an imperial unit of speed equal to one statute mile (1,609.344 metres) per hour. The conversion factor to km/h — 1.609344 — is an exact constant established by the 1959 international yard and pound agreement. The kilometre per hour is the SI-derived unit for speed used on road signs and vehicle speedometers in most of the world, defined as 1,000 metres per hour. Both units measure the same physical quantity: rate of change of position over time.
NIST SI Reference →Australia uses km/h exclusively for all road speed limits. Default limits: 50 km/h in built-up areas, 100 km/h on rural roads, 110 km/h on freeways (some states). School zones: 40 km/h or 25 km/h when children present. Speed cameras and police radar operate in km/h throughout Australia. Australian drivers visiting the US or UK — where limits are posted in mph — should use this tool to convert before driving to avoid accidental speeding or under-speed situations on high-speed roads.
Miles to km →Whether converting speed between mph and km/h, distance between miles and kilometres, length between mm and metres, volume between mL and litres, or pressure between PSI and kPa, our complete library of free, bidirectional metric and imperial converters provides instant, precise results with full multi-unit breakdowns for every conversion needed in science, engineering, travel, motorsport, and everyday life in 2026.
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