Accurate conversion between Kilometres per Hour (km/h) and Knots (kn)
Convert Kilometres per Hour to Knots instantly with precise calculations. Includes reverse Knots to km/h conversion, full formula reference, real-world speed examples, and km/h to knots tables for 2026.
Professional speed conversion for aviation, maritime navigation, meteorology, and motorsport
Convert kilometres per hour (km/h) to knots using the exact defined relationship: 1 knot = 1.852 km/h (exact, by international definition). One knot is one nautical mile per hour, and the nautical mile is defined as exactly 1,852 metres. Our tool delivers full-precision results instantly for any speed value you enter — from light winds to supersonic aircraft.
Switch between km/h to knots and knots to km/h conversion in one click. Whether you are a pilot reading airspeed in km/h and need knots for ATC communication, a sailor converting a weather forecast wind speed, or a student cross-checking navigation calculations — both directions are handled instantly from a single input field.
Essential for aviation, maritime navigation, weather forecasting, competitive sailing, shipping logistics, and military operations in 2026. Knots are the standard unit for airspeed and wind speed internationally, while km/h is used in everyday road and weather reporting — making this one of the most frequently needed speed conversions for professionals and enthusiasts alike.
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A knot (kn) is a unit of speed equal to one nautical mile per hour. The nautical mile is defined as exactly 1,852 metres, which means 1 knot = 1.852 kilometres per hour exactly. The knot has been the international standard for measuring airspeed, wind speed, and vessel speed since the mid-20th century and remains mandatory for aviation and maritime navigation under ICAO and IMO regulations worldwide.
The name "knot" comes from a historical navigation practice — sailors measured a ship's speed by tossing a wooden board (a "chip log") attached to a rope knotted at regular intervals overboard and counting the number of knots that passed through their hands in a fixed time. The unit has been formalised since, and you can explore more speed and unit converters on the ConcreticMetric converter hub.
The conversion between km/h and knots uses the exact defined value of the nautical mile (1,852 m). Because both the nautical mile and the kilometre are exact SI-related definitions, the conversion constant is exact with no rounding error.
Example: 200 km/h ÷ 1.852 = 107.991 knots
Example: 250 knots × 1.852 = 463 km/h
Bar heights represent relative speeds on a proportional scale from light breeze to supersonic
The reference table below covers the most commonly needed km/h to knots conversions, from low wind speeds used in meteorology up to aviation cruise speeds and beyond.
| km/h | Knots (kn) | m/s | Real-World Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 km/h | 0.540 kn | 0.278 m/s | Calm air — nearly still |
| 5 km/h | 2.700 kn | 1.389 m/s | Light air — smoke drifts |
| 10 km/h | 5.400 kn | 2.778 m/s | Light breeze — leaves rustle |
| 20 km/h | 10.799 kn | 5.556 m/s | Gentle breeze — flags extended |
| 30 km/h | 16.199 kn | 8.333 m/s | Moderate breeze — small branches move |
| 50 km/h | 26.998 kn | 13.889 m/s | Fresh wind — large branches sway |
| 60 km/h | 32.397 kn | 16.667 m/s | Strong wind — umbrellas invert |
| 74 km/h | 39.957 kn | 20.556 m/s | Beaufort Force 8 — near gale |
| 100 km/h | 53.996 kn | 27.778 m/s | Storm — widespread damage |
| 119 km/h | 64.255 kn | 33.056 m/s | Tropical storm threshold |
| 120 km/h | 64.796 kn | 33.333 m/s | Category 1 hurricane boundary |
| 185 km/h | 99.892 kn | 51.389 m/s | Category 3 hurricane |
| 250 km/h | 134.989 kn | 69.444 m/s | Category 5 hurricane / high-speed train |
| 500 km/h | 269.978 kn | 138.889 m/s | Propeller aircraft cruise |
| 900 km/h | 485.961 kn | 250 m/s | Typical airliner cruise speed |
| 1,235 km/h | 667.17 kn | 343.056 m/s | Speed of sound (Mach 1 at sea level) |
| 1,852 km/h | 1,000 kn | 514.444 m/s | 1,000 knots exactly |
| 2,179 km/h | 1,176 kn | 605.278 m/s | Concorde cruising speed |
Converting km/h to knots is straightforward using the nautical mile definition. Here is the step-by-step method:
One knot = one nautical mile per hour. The nautical mile (1,852 m) was originally defined as one minute of arc of latitude along any meridian of the Earth — making it directly linked to Earth's geometry. This is why nautical navigation charts and GPS coordinates use it naturally.
Under ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organisation) regulations, all aircraft airspeed, wind speed, and altitude in aviation weather reports worldwide are expressed in knots. A pilot flying at 450 km/h would report their airspeed as 243 knots on radio communications and flight plans.
The knot is the universal speed unit for vessels at sea, mandated by the IMO. A container ship cruising at 42 km/h is doing 22.7 knots. GPS chart plotters, VHF weather broadcasts, and AIS transponders all display speed in knots — making the km/h-to-knots conversion essential for any mariner.
Wind speeds in official weather reports, TAF/METAR aviation forecasts, and tropical cyclone bulletins are given in knots internationally. The Beaufort Scale — used globally to classify wind force — maps directly to knot ranges. A Force 10 storm corresponds to winds of 48–55 knots (89–102 km/h).
The speed of sound at sea level (15°C) is approximately 1,235 km/h = 667 knots = Mach 1. Aircraft speed relative to the speed of sound is expressed as Mach number — but air traffic control still issues speed restrictions in knots. Supersonic aircraft like Concorde cruised at Mach 2.04 — about 1,176 knots (2,179 km/h).
Because 1 nautical mile = exactly 1,852 metres (by international definition since 1929), and 1 km = exactly 1,000 metres, the conversion factor of 1 knot = 1.852 km/h exactly carries no rounding error. All decimal places beyond the conversion factor come only from the input value itself.
1 knot = 1.852 km/h = 0.5144 m/s = 1.1508 mph = 1 nautical mile per hour
To convert km/h → knots: divide by 1.852. To convert knots → km/h: multiply by 1.852.
A Boeing 737 cruises at approximately 840 km/h.
840 ÷ 1.852 = 453.6 knots — the speed a pilot would file in their flight plan and report to air traffic control. The same aircraft's approach speed of 250 km/h = 135 knots.
A common error is treating knots and miles per hour as the same unit. They are not — 1 knot = 1.1508 mph, not 1 mph. A wind forecast of "30 knots" means 55.56 km/h, not 30 mph (48.3 km/h). Always use the correct conversion factor for safety-critical applications in aviation and maritime navigation.
The International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) mandates the use of knots for airspeed and wind speed in all international aviation operations. Their standards documents define how speed units are applied in flight plans, weather reports (METAR/TAF), and ATC communications worldwide in 2026.
Visit ICAO →The Bureau International des Poids et Mesures recognises the knot as a non-SI unit accepted for use with the SI system. Their official SI Brochure documents the exact relationship between the knot, nautical mile, and the metre, providing the authoritative basis for all km/h to knots conversions.
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