Kilograms to Stone: Reading Your Weight the British Way
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters
If your scales show kilograms but your doctor, your gran or your slimming group talks in stone, you are not alone. The stone is one of the last imperial units in regular daily use in the UK and Ireland, and it survives almost entirely for one purpose: describing how much a person weighs. Knowing how to move between the two units lets you read any reading in the format you find natural, whether that comes from a smart scale, a fitness app or a hospital chart.
A stone is simply a block of 14 pounds. The unit goes back centuries to the practice of using an actual stone as a standard weight in markets, and its value once varied by region and commodity. The British Weights and Measures Act of 1835 fixed it at exactly 14 pounds for all purposes, and that is the definition still in force today. In metric terms one stone is 6.35029318 kilograms, a figure that flows directly from the modern definition of the pound.
The conversion itself is a two-step division. First divide your kilogram figure by 6.35029318 to get a decimal number of stones. The whole-number part is your stones. To turn the leftover decimal into pounds, multiply it by 14, since there are 14 pounds in a stone. Take 75 kg as an example: 75 ÷ 6.35029318 gives 11.81 stone, and 0.81 × 14 is about 11.3, so 75 kg is roughly 11 stone 11 lb.
Small rounding choices matter more than people expect when weights are close together. A change of just under half a kilogram is about one pound, so if you round too early during a weight-loss journey you can hide real progress or invent change that isn't there. The safest habit is to keep your original kilogram reading and convert from that each time, rather than converting an already-rounded stone figure back and forth.
Context helps the numbers mean something. UK health guidance describes a healthy body mass index as roughly 18.5 to 24.9, and for someone about 5 feet 9 inches tall that maps to a window of around 9 stone up to roughly 12 stone 7 lb. Those are general ranges, not personal targets, and factors such as muscle mass and build shift what is healthy for an individual, so treat any converted figure as information rather than a verdict.
Quick tips
- To go the other way, multiply stones by 6.35029318 to get kilograms, or remember that each stone is about 6.35 kg and each pound about 0.45 kg.
- For a fast mental estimate, multiply kilograms by 0.157 to get decimal stones, then refine on the tool when you need the pounds.
- Always convert from your raw kilogram reading, not a previously rounded stone value, to avoid drift when tracking weekly weight changes.
- When recording weight for medical or official use, note the original kilogram figure beside the stone-and-pound result so nothing is lost to rounding.
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