Convert light-years to kilometers, miles, AU, parsecs, and more. Includes cosmic distance reference table and light travel times.
A light-year is the distance light travels in one Julian year — about 9.461 trillion kilometers or 5.879 trillion miles. It is the standard yardstick of astronomy, used to express interstellar and intergalactic distances that would otherwise require impossibly large numbers in raw unit form.
This light-year conversion calculator converts between light-years, kilometers, miles, astronomical units (AU), and parsecs in a single view. Enter a value in any of those five units and instantly see all the others, plus light-minutes and light-seconds. Preset buttons let you jump to famous cosmic distances like Proxima Centauri, the Galactic Center, and the Andromeda Galaxy.
A logarithmic scale bar puts your value in perspective from planetary distances to the edge of the observable universe. The cosmic distance reference table lists ten benchmark objects, and a collapsible light-travel-time chart shows how long it takes a photon to cross familiar spans — from one meter to an entire galaxy.
Working with cosmic distances means juggling enormous numbers — trillions of kilometers, millions of AU, or fractions of parsecs. Manually converting between these units is tedious and error-prone, especially with the exponential magnitudes involved.
This calculator performs all five cross-conversions simultaneously, displays results in scientific notation for readability, and provides a log-scale visualization and reference table for context. It's indispensable for astronomy students, science teachers, space enthusiasts, and anyone who wants to grasp the sheer scale of the universe.
Light-year conversions: 1 ly = 9,460,730,472,580.8 km = 5,878,625,373,183.6 mi = 63,241.077 AU = 0.30660 pc. | 1 AU = 149,597,870.7 km | 1 pc = 3.26156 ly.
Result: 4.013 × 10¹³ km
4.24 light-years (the distance to Proxima Centauri) equals about 40.13 trillion km, 24.94 trillion miles, 268,182 AU, or 1.30 parsecs.
Most people are comfortable with kilometers or miles on a map. But once you leave Earth's atmosphere, familiar units become unmanageable. The Moon is 384,400 km away — still comprehensible. Mars at its closest is about 54.6 million km. By the time you reach Pluto (5.9 billion km), the numbers strain intuition. Enter the light-year: expressing Proxima Centauri as 4.24 ly is far more intuitive than 40,130,000,000,000 km.
While pop culture uses light-years, professional astronomers often prefer parsecs (pc), kiloparsecs (kpc), and megaparsecs (Mpc). The parsec is based on stellar parallax — the apparent shift of a star against the background as Earth orbits the Sun. One parsec is the distance at which one astronomical unit spans one arcsecond. Both units have their place: light-years are easier for the public, and parsecs integrate neatly into parallax and distance-modulus calculations used in research.
Light in a vacuum travels at 299,792,458 m/s — the universal speed limit. It takes light 1.28 seconds to reach us from the Moon, 8.3 minutes from the Sun, and 4.24 years from the nearest star. Looking at the Andromeda Galaxy means seeing it as it was 2.5 million years ago, which makes telescopes literal time machines. This calculator quantifies those travel times and places your inputs on the cosmic timeline.
One light-year is approximately 9,460,730,472,581 kilometers (about 9.461 trillion km).
A light-year measures the distance light travels in one year. A parsec (parallax arcsecond) is the distance at which 1 AU subtends one arcsecond of parallax — about 3.2616 light-years.
One light-year equals approximately 63,241 astronomical units (AU). One AU is the average Earth-Sun distance.
About 8 minutes and 20 seconds. The Earth-Sun distance (1 AU) is roughly 149.6 million km.
Interstellar distances in km have too many digits to be practical. Proxima Centauri is 40 trillion km away — "4.24 light-years" is far easier to communicate and compare.
The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) at about 2.537 million light-years is the most distant object visible without a telescope under dark skies.