Convert knots to kilometers per hour and vice versa. Includes mph, m/s, Mach, Beaufort scale, and full speed reference tables.
Knots are the standard speed unit for ships, aircraft, and marine weather, while km/h is the everyday metric speed unit on land. One knot equals exactly 1.852 km/h, so the conversion is simple once the unit context is clear.
This page also shows mph, m/s, ft/s, and Mach, plus a Beaufort-scale reference for wind interpretation. That makes it useful whether you are reading a marine forecast, filing a flight plan, or comparing vessel speed with road-speed units. It also helps when a forecast, logbook, or navigation display uses knots but you need a result that fits road-speed or weather-report conventions. The extra speed references make it easier to sanity-check a value before using it in navigation, reporting, or weather communication. It is especially handy when you want to compare a nautical speed against a land-speed limit, flight Mach number, or wind advisory threshold in one place.
Use it when a nautical speed needs to be understood in metric road units or vice versa.
Knots are common in marine and aviation work, but less intuitive on land. This page bridges that gap and gives the wind-scale context people usually need next when they see a speed in knots. It is useful when you want to compare a vessel, aircraft, or wind reading against the km/h values people more readily recognize.
km/h = knots × 1.852. knots = km/h ÷ 1.852. mph = knots × 1.15078. m/s = km/h ÷ 3.6.
Result: 100 kt = 185.2 km/h = 115.1 mph = 51.4 m/s
100 × 1.852 = 185.2 km/h. Beaufort Force 12+ (hurricane force).
The nautical mile was originally defined as 1 minute of arc of latitude along any meridian. This makes it uniquely convenient for navigation: 1° of latitude = 60 nautical miles. The international nautical mile was standardized at exactly 1,852 meters in 1929.
Pilots use several speed measures: indicated airspeed (IAS), true airspeed (TAS), and ground speed — all typically reported in knots. At cruising altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS due to lower air density. A typical jet cruises at 450–500 KTAS.
The Beaufort scale was the standard way to record wind before anemometers became common. Sailors estimated wind force by observing waves. Force 7 (28–33 knots) produces "sea heaps up" with foam streaks. Force 12 (≥64 knots) produces "air filled with foam and spray" with visibility seriously reduced.
1 knot = 1.852 km/h exactly. This is an international standard.
Knots are based on nautical miles, which correspond to the latitude/longitude grid. 1 nautical mile = 1 minute of latitude, making navigation calculations simpler.
Developed by Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort in 1805, it classifies wind speed into 13 forces (0–12) based on observed sea conditions. Force 0 is calm; Force 12 is hurricane.
A Category 1 hurricane starts at 64 knots, which is about 119 km/h. Stronger hurricane categories rise quickly from there, so this converter is useful when forecast wind speeds are reported in nautical units.
A nautical mile is a unit of distance (1.852 km). A knot is a unit of speed (1 nautical mile per hour).
Divide by 1.852. Example: 200 km/h ÷ 1.852 = 108.0 knots.