Accurate conversion between m/s and km/h — instant results, no sign-up required
Convert metres per second to kilometres per hour instantly with our free m/s to km/h converter 2026. Includes reverse km/h to m/s, miles per hour (mph), knots, feet per second, full formula reference, and conversion tables for physics, sport, weather, and engineering.
Fast, accurate speed conversion for physics, sport, meteorology, engineering, and everyday calculations in 2026
Convert any speed in metres per second to kilometres per hour using the exact formula: km/h = m/s × 3.6. This factor comes directly from the unit definitions: 1 km = 1,000 m and 1 hour = 3,600 s, so 1 m/s = 3,600 m/h = 3.6 km/h. Our m/s to km/h converter also outputs mph, knots, feet per second, and cm/s — giving you a complete multi-unit speed breakdown in one step.
Switch seamlessly between metres per second to km/h and km/h to m/s conversion modes. Whether you are converting a wind speed from a meteorological report, a physics problem velocity, a vehicle speed limit, or an athlete's sprint time, both conversion directions are handled instantly from a single input value in 2026.
Essential for physics and engineering students working with SI units, meteorologists reporting wind speeds, sports scientists analysing athlete velocity, pilots and mariners converting between speed systems, and anyone comparing speed limits across metric and imperial countries. The metres per second to km/h converter is a core tool for anyone working with motion and velocity in 2026.
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The metres per second to kilometres per hour converter is a free online tool that converts any speed in m/s to km/h — and back — instantly. It uses the exact conversion factor of 1 m/s = 3.6 km/h, which is derived directly from SI unit definitions (1 km = 1,000 m; 1 hour = 3,600 seconds). The tool also outputs miles per hour (mph), knots, feet per second (ft/s), and centimetres per second (cm/s) in the same calculation, giving you a complete multi-unit speed breakdown with no sign-up required in 2026.
Metres per second (m/s) is the SI base unit of speed used in physics, science, and engineering, while kilometres per hour (km/h) is the everyday unit used for road speeds, weather reports, and transport across most of the world. Converting between the two is one of the most common unit conversions in science education and daily life. You can also browse our Days to Weeks Converter and other free tools on ConcreteMetric for more unit conversion needs.
1 m/s = 3.6 km/h = 2.23694 mph = 1.94384 knots = 3.28084 ft/s = 100 cm/s
The conversion between m/s and km/h is based entirely on the SI unit definitions — no approximations are needed. Since 1 kilometre = 1,000 metres and 1 hour = 3,600 seconds, the factor is exactly 3,600 ÷ 1,000 = 3.6. This means multiplying m/s by 3.6 always gives the exact km/h equivalent, and dividing km/h by 3.6 gives the exact m/s value. This is one of the cleanest and most exact unit conversions in the metric system, making it easy to calculate mentally in 2026.
To mentally convert m/s to km/h, multiply by 3.6. For a fast rough estimate, multiply by 3.5 and add 3% — e.g., 20 m/s × 3.5 = 70, +3% ≈ 72 km/h (exact: 72.0 km/h). Or simply remember: 10 m/s = 36 km/h, so double or halve from that anchor point.
The reference table below lists common m/s to km/h conversions across the full range of practical speeds — from walking pace to supersonic. All values use the exact factor of 1 m/s = 3.6 km/h. For any value not listed, use the m/s to km/h calculator above.
| m/s | km/h | mph | Knots | Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 m/s | 1.8 km/h | 1.118 mph | 0.972 kn | Slow walk |
| 1 m/s | 3.6 km/h | 2.237 mph | 1.944 kn | Casual walk |
| 1.4 m/s | 5.04 km/h | 3.131 mph | 2.721 kn | Brisk walk |
| 2 m/s | 7.2 km/h | 4.474 mph | 3.888 kn | Fast walk / slow jog |
| 3 m/s | 10.8 km/h | 6.711 mph | 5.832 kn | Jogging pace |
| 4 m/s | 14.4 km/h | 8.948 mph | 7.776 kn | Running pace |
| 5 m/s | 18.0 km/h | 11.185 mph | 9.720 kn | Fast run |
| 8.33 m/s | 30.0 km/h | 18.641 mph | 16.198 kn | Urban speed limit |
| 10 m/s | 36.0 km/h | 22.369 mph | 19.438 kn | Usain Bolt top speed |
| 13.89 m/s | 50.0 km/h | 31.069 mph | 26.998 kn | Suburban speed limit |
| 16.67 m/s | 60.0 km/h | 37.282 mph | 32.397 kn | Urban road limit |
| 19.44 m/s | 70.0 km/h | 43.496 mph | 37.797 kn | Road speed |
| 22.22 m/s | 80.0 km/h | 49.710 mph | 43.197 kn | Open road limit |
| 25 m/s | 90.0 km/h | 55.923 mph | 48.596 kn | Rural road |
| 27.78 m/s | 100.0 km/h | 62.137 mph | 53.996 kn | Highway speed |
| 33.33 m/s | 120.0 km/h | 74.565 mph | 64.795 kn | Motorway limit (AU/EU) |
| 36.11 m/s | 130.0 km/h | 80.778 mph | 70.194 kn | Autobahn / Motorway |
| 55.56 m/s | 200.0 km/h | 124.274 mph | 107.991 kn | High-speed train |
| 83.33 m/s | 300.0 km/h | 186.411 mph | 161.987 kn | TGV / Shinkansen |
| 340 m/s | 1,224.0 km/h | 760.9 mph | 661.5 kn | Speed of sound (Mach 1) |
Use this km/h to m/s reference table when you need to convert a speed limit, vehicle speed, or wind speed from kilometres per hour back to metres per second for use in physics equations, engineering calculations, or scientific reports in 2026.
| km/h | m/s | mph | ft/s | Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 km/h | 0.2778 m/s | 0.6214 mph | 0.9113 ft/s | — |
| 5 km/h | 1.3889 m/s | 3.107 mph | 4.557 ft/s | Walking pace |
| 10 km/h | 2.7778 m/s | 6.214 mph | 9.113 ft/s | Jogging |
| 20 km/h | 5.5556 m/s | 12.427 mph | 18.227 ft/s | Cycling |
| 30 km/h | 8.3333 m/s | 18.641 mph | 27.340 ft/s | School zone |
| 40 km/h | 11.111 m/s | 24.855 mph | 36.454 ft/s | Urban road |
| 50 km/h | 13.889 m/s | 31.069 mph | 45.567 ft/s | Suburban limit |
| 60 km/h | 16.667 m/s | 37.282 mph | 54.681 ft/s | Urban road |
| 80 km/h | 22.222 m/s | 49.710 mph | 72.907 ft/s | Open road |
| 100 km/h | 27.778 m/s | 62.137 mph | 91.134 ft/s | Highway |
| 110 km/h | 30.556 m/s | 68.351 mph | 100.247 ft/s | AU motorway limit |
| 120 km/h | 33.333 m/s | 74.565 mph | 109.361 ft/s | EU motorway |
| 130 km/h | 36.111 m/s | 80.778 mph | 118.474 ft/s | Autobahn |
| 200 km/h | 55.556 m/s | 124.274 mph | 182.268 ft/s | High-speed train |
| 300 km/h | 83.333 m/s | 186.411 mph | 273.403 ft/s | TGV / Shinkansen |
| 1,224 km/h | 340.0 m/s | 760.9 mph | 1,115.5 ft/s | Speed of sound |
Converting m/s to km/h is one of the simplest unit conversions in the metric system — just multiply by the exact factor of 3.6. The three steps below explain the derivation and show how to apply it in practice.
The factor 3.6 comes from the unit relationship: to go from m/s to km/h, you multiply by the number of seconds in an hour (3,600) and divide by the number of metres in a kilometre (1,000). 3,600 ÷ 1,000 = 3.6 exactly. This means any m/s value × 3.6 = km/h, with no rounding or approximation needed.
Take your speed in m/s and multiply by 3.6. Example: 25 m/s × 3.6 = 90 km/h. For mental arithmetic, you can break it into: 25 × 3 = 75, plus 25 × 0.6 = 15, total = 90. Alternatively, multiply by 4 and subtract 10%: 25 × 4 = 100, minus 10% = 90 km/h. Both give the same result.
To convert km/h back to m/s, divide by 3.6. Example: 90 km/h ÷ 3.6 = 25 m/s. A useful mental check: 100 km/h ÷ 3.6 ≈ 27.78 m/s. Alternatively, divide by 4 and add 11%: 90 ÷ 4 = 22.5, plus 11% ≈ 24.975 ≈ 25 m/s ✔.
Step 1: Factor = 3.6 (exact, derived from SI definitions)
Step 2: 15 m/s × 3.6 = 54.0 km/h
Cross-check: 54 ÷ 3.6 = 15 m/s ✔
Other units: 15 m/s = 54 km/h = 33.554 mph = 29.157 knots = 49.213 ft/s
Context: 54 km/h is a common urban road speed and is above the 50 km/h limit in many Australian and European cities.
The metres per second to kilometres per hour converter is used across a wide range of scientific, engineering, sports, and everyday contexts wherever speed needs to be expressed in different unit systems.
Physics equations — kinematics, Newton's laws, energy, momentum — use SI units where speed is always in m/s. But real-world context (e.g., "a car travelling at 100 km/h") is given in km/h. Converting between m/s and km/h is one of the most common tasks in secondary and university physics courses globally in 2026.
Weather services and the Beaufort wind scale often report wind speeds in m/s or km/h depending on the country. A wind speed of 20 m/s = 72 km/h is classified as a gale (Beaufort 8). Meteorologists, pilots, and sailors frequently use m/s to km/h conversion when reading multi-source weather data in 2026.
Sprint speeds from timing gates are often output in m/s (e.g., Usain Bolt's 100m world record average = 10.44 m/s = 37.58 km/h). Sports scientists and coaches convert m/s to km/h to communicate athlete speed in a more intuitive unit for athletes, media, and sports fans who are unfamiliar with m/s values.
Traffic engineers analyse vehicle dynamics using m/s in calculations (braking distance, reaction time, impact force), while road speed limits are posted in km/h. Converting 100 km/h to 27.78 m/s is a routine step when calculating stopping distances, design speeds, and crash severity in road safety assessments in 2026.
Aircraft performance data uses m/s or km/h (SI), while navigation uses knots. A cruising speed of 250 m/s ≈ 900 km/h ≈ 486 knots. Pilots, flight dispatchers, and maritime navigators use m/s to km/h (and knots) conversions regularly when working across different instruments and documentation systems.
Robotic systems, autonomous vehicles, and industrial conveyors are programmed with speeds in m/s (SI), but performance specifications and user interfaces display km/h. Converting between m/s and km/h is a routine step in embedded systems programming, motion control, and human-machine interface design for engineering projects in 2026.
Important: When using speed in physics or engineering formulas (e.g., kinetic energy: KE = ½mv²; braking distance: d = v²/2a), always use m/s, not km/h. Plugging km/h directly into these equations gives incorrect results. Convert to m/s first by dividing km/h by 3.6. For example, 100 km/h ÷ 3.6 = 27.78 m/s — then use 27.78 in your equation. This is one of the most common unit errors in physics problem solving.
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The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) maintains the official reference for SI units including the metre and second — the base units from which m/s is derived. NIST SP 811 provides all official conversion factors between SI and other speed units used globally in 2026.
Visit NIST SP 811 →The Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM) publishes the SI Brochure — the definitive international reference for the International System of Units. It defines the metre and second, from which all m/s to km/h conversion factors are derived with mathematical precision.
View SI Brochure →ConcreteMetric offers a full suite of free converters for speed, time, energy, pressure, area, weight, and more. All tools are free, mobile-friendly, and updated for 2026 — no registration or download required. Explore the full collection today.
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