Which Speed Unit Should You Use, and How to Convert Between Them

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters

Speed is one number measured in many ways, and the unit you meet usually depends on where you are and what you are doing. Drivers see mph in the United States and the United Kingdom and km/h across most of the rest of the world. Scientists and engineers prefer metres per second because it is the SI standard and slots cleanly into physics formulas. Pilots, sailors and meteorologists speak in knots. Knowing which unit belongs to which context is the first step to converting confidently rather than guessing.

The everyday conversions rely on a few exact ratios worth memorising. One mile per hour is 1.609344 km/h, one knot is exactly 1.852 km/h, and one km/h is 1/3.6 m/s. From these you can chain any conversion: to turn mph into m/s, convert to km/h first, then divide by 3.6. The convenient mental shortcut is that dividing km/h by 3.6 gives m/s, which is why a 36 km/h cyclist is moving at a tidy 10 m/s.

Knots deserve special mention because they look arbitrary until you understand the geometry behind them. A nautical mile is defined as one arcminute of latitude, so a vessel travelling at a steady number of knots covers a predictable number of latitude minutes per hour, which makes chart navigation straightforward. That practical link is why knots survive in aviation and shipping even though km/h would be simpler arithmetic. When you see a wind or current forecast in knots, multiply by 1.852 to picture it in km/h.

Mach is the trickiest unit because it is a ratio, not a fixed speed. Mach 1 is the local speed of sound, which depends on air temperature: at sea level on a standard day it is roughly 661 knots, but near 36,000 feet, where the air is far colder, it drops to around 573 knots. That is why high-altitude jet speeds are quoted in Mach rather than a fixed mph figure, and why any Mach conversion based on a single sea-level reference is an approximation. Use the Mach output here for rough comparisons, not precise aircraft performance.

In practice, a converter saves you from both the wrong factor and arithmetic slips. Enter your number once, then read every unit at the same time so you can sanity-check the result against something familiar, such as a highway speed or a brisk run. Because the calculation happens in your browser, it is instant and private, and you can convert back and forth as many times as you like while comparing figures from different sources.

Quick tips

  • To estimate m/s from km/h in your head, divide by 3.6: a 90 km/h car is moving at about 25 m/s.
  • When reading marine or aviation forecasts, multiply knots by roughly 1.85 to get km/h, or by about 1.15 to get mph.
  • For a rough mph-to-km/h sanity check, add about 60 percent: 50 mph is near 80 km/h.
  • Treat any Mach figure as a sea-level estimate; a real aircraft at cruise altitude is slower at the same Mach because the air is colder.

The Speed Converter is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.