Convert Fahrenheit to Celsius, Kelvin, and Rankine. Weather comfort ranges, oven temperature guide, thermometer visualization, and preset reference values.
Fahrenheit (°F) is the primary temperature scale in the United States and a few other countries. Named after German physicist Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, the scale sets 32 °F as water's freezing point and 212 °F as its boiling point, with 180 degrees between them. While most of the world uses Celsius, Fahrenheit remains deeply embedded in American weather, cooking, and everyday life.
This converter provides instant bidirectional conversion between Fahrenheit and Celsius, plus Kelvin and Rankine. The weather comfort range indicator shows what any temperature feels like in practical terms, from "extreme cold" to "extreme heat." For cooks, the expandable oven temperature guide maps Fahrenheit to Celsius and Gas Mark for common baking temperatures.
Whether you are an American traveling abroad, a metric-user visiting the US, translating a recipe, or comparing weather forecasts from different countries, this converter gives you instant answers with weather context and cooking references that make Fahrenheit intuitive for everyone.
Americans need C→F for international weather; everyone else needs F→C for US recipes and travel. This tool converts instantly, explains what temperatures feel like in everyday terms, and includes an oven guide for the cases where Fahrenheit still dominates. That makes it useful for both everyday weather checks and practical kitchen conversion work.
°F to °C: °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9 °C to °F: °F = °C × 9/5 + 32 °F to K: K = (°F − 32) × 5/9 + 273.15 °F to °R: °R = °F + 459.67
Result: 22.22 °C, 295.37 K
72 °F is a comfortable room temperature. Conversion: (72 − 32) × 5/9 = 40 × 0.5556 = 22.22 °C. In Kelvin: 22.22 + 273.15 = 295.37 K.
Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1686-1736) created his scale in 1724. He set three reference points: 0°F for a brine solution, 32°F for ice water, and 96°F for body temperature (later corrected to 98.6°F). The scale gained popularity in the English-speaking world. Today, only the United States, its territories, and a handful of small nations use Fahrenheit as the primary temperature scale.
American recipes universally use Fahrenheit. Common temperatures: 325°F (slow roast), 350°F (standard bake), 375°F (cookies), 400°F (roast vegetables), 425°F (pizza), 450°F (high-heat sear). When converting international recipes, always check whether temperatures are in Celsius (most of the world) or Fahrenheit (US recipes).
The US is one of only three countries not officially using the metric system (alongside Myanmar and Liberia). Despite the Metric Conversion Act of 1975 and the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, Fahrenheit persists in daily American life. Science, medicine, and the military use Celsius/Kelvin, creating a dual-system environment.
Subtract 32, then multiply by 5/9. Formula: °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9. Example: 98.6°F → (98.6 − 32) × 5/9 = 66.6 × 5/9 = 37°C.
The Fahrenheit scale was standard when America was colonized. While most nations switched to Celsius with metrication, the US retained Fahrenheit due to cultural inertia, infrastructure costs, and the lack of a strong federal push to convert.
-40 degrees. Set the equation °F = °C × 9/5 + 32 with °F = °C: C = C × 1.8 + 32 → -0.8C = 32 → C = -40. So -40°C = -40°F.
0°F = -17.78°C. Fahrenheit chose 0°F as the temperature of a specific brine solution (ice, water, and ammonium chloride) — the coldest temperature he could reliably reproduce.
Fahrenheit offers more granularity for weather: 0-100°F covers almost the full human-experience range, while Celsius spreads the same range over -18 to 38°C. Some argue this makes Fahrenheit more intuitive for daily weather.
Gas Mark 4 ≈ 350°F (177°C). The Gas Mark scale is used in UK and some Commonwealth recipes. Gas Mark 1 = 275°F, and each mark adds roughly 25°F.