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Only four countries use miles on their road signs: the United States, the United Kingdom, Liberia, and Myanmar. The other 190-plus countries use kilometers. This creates a daily conversion problem for anyone who travels internationally, follows a training plan written in the other system, checks a foreign speed limit, or reads a race result from a different country.
The converter above handles three modes: distance (km to miles), speed (km/h to mph), and altitude. Enter a value, read the result, and tap the result row to expand additional unit conversions. Below, you will find the formula, the Fibonacci mental math trick, a full race distance reference table, common speed limit conversions, and the mistakes worth knowing before you drive or race abroad.
Table of Contents
- How to Use This Converter
- The KM to Miles Formula
- Mental Math Tricks: The 0.6 Rule and the Fibonacci Shortcut
- Which Countries Use Miles vs Kilometers
- Real-World Uses
- Race Distance Reference Table
- Speed Limit Conversion Table
- Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Frequently Asked Questions
How to Use This Converter
The tool at the top of this page works in three modes.
- Select a mode. Distance converts km to miles. Speed converts km/h to mph. Altitude converts km to miles for elevation figures. The presets and dropdown labels update automatically when you switch.
- Enter a value. Type any positive number directly into the large input field. The number stays fully visible as you type. The result updates instantly below it.
- Read the result and expand for more. The main result shows miles (or mph). Tap the result row to open the dropdown, which shows the same value in yards, feet, meters, and nautical miles simultaneously.
The preset cards cover the most searched distances: 5 km, 10 km, 100 km, and 500 km for distance mode; 30, 60, 100, and 120 km/h for speed mode; and common altitude reference points including 8.849 km (Everest’s summit) for altitude mode.
The KM to Miles Formula
One exact constant covers all km-to-miles conversions.
Kilometers to miles:
miles = km × 0.621371
Example: 100 km × 0.621371 = 62.137 miles
Miles back to kilometers:
km = miles × 1.609344
Example: 26.2 miles × 1.609344 = 42.165 km
Speed (km/h to mph):
mph = km/h × 0.621371
Example: 100 km/h × 0.621371 = 62.14 mph
The conversion factor is exact, not approximate. The 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement defined 1 yard as exactly 0.9144 meters. Since 1 mile equals 1,760 yards, that makes 1 mile exactly 1,609.344 meters, or 1.609344 km. The inverse (1 km = 0.621371192… miles) follows directly from this definition. There is no rounding in the base conversion — any imprecision comes only from how many decimal places you display.
Mental Math Tricks: The 0.6 Rule and the Fibonacci Shortcut
Two mental shortcuts let you estimate km-to-miles conversions without a calculator.
The 0.6 rule
Multiply kilometers by 0.6 for a rough estimate. The result is within 3% of the exact answer. 10 km × 0.6 = 6 miles (exact: 6.214). 100 km × 0.6 = 60 miles (exact: 62.14). Fast to compute, close enough for casual use.
For better accuracy, use the 5/8 method: multiply by 5, then divide by 8. This is because 5/8 = 0.625, which is within 0.6% of 0.621371. 10 km × 5 = 50, then 50 ÷ 8 = 6.25 miles (exact: 6.214). The extra step gives you a tighter result without a calculator.
The Fibonacci shortcut
This is the most elegant trick. The Fibonacci sequence is 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89… Each number is the sum of the two before it. The ratio between consecutive Fibonacci numbers converges toward the golden ratio, 1.618. The km-to-miles conversion factor is 1.609, which is remarkably close to 1.618. This means consecutive Fibonacci numbers approximate the km-to-miles relationship.
In practice: 5 km ≈ 3 miles (exact: 3.107), 8 km ≈ 5 miles (exact: 4.971), 13 km ≈ 8 miles (exact: 8.078), 21 km ≈ 13 miles (exact: 13.049). Each estimate is within 1% of the correct answer. Runners use this constantly: a 5K is roughly 3 miles, a 10K is roughly 6 miles (two Fibonacci steps), and a half marathon at 21 km is roughly 13 miles.
Which Countries Use Miles vs Kilometers
The metric system, including kilometers for distance, has been adopted by the vast majority of countries worldwide. Only three countries have not officially adopted the metric system: the United States, Myanmar, and Liberia. The UK occupies a middle position: metric is partially adopted but miles persist, and people routinely refer to pints, miles per gallon, pounds, and even stone in their everyday lives.
The result is a two-system world in practice. Any runner following a European training plan, any driver renting a car in France, any traveler reading a road sign in Germany, or any engineer working with US specifications will encounter both systems regularly. The conversion is not just a mathematical exercise. It is a daily practical need for millions of people who move between these environments.
The US passed the Metric Conversion Act in 1975, officially recognizing the metric system, but voluntary adoption means miles remain the standard for everyday distance in the US. The UK began metrication in the 1960s but never completed it for road measurements. Among the nations that continue to use miles, the most prominent are the United Kingdom, the United States, Liberia, and Myanmar.
Real-World Uses: When You Need This Conversion
International road trips and driving
Speed limits in continental Europe are set in km/h. A US driver accustomed to mph faces an unfamiliar number on every sign. The standard motorway limit in France, Spain, and Germany is 130 km/h, which equals 80.78 mph. Urban limits of 50 km/h equal 31.07 mph. Country roads at 90 km/h equal 55.92 mph. Knowing these equivalents before you drive prevents confusion at speed cameras and intersections. Rental car speedometers in Europe show km/h; some show both. Converting the posted limit to the displayed unit before you leave the car hire lot is a 10-second task that matters on the road.
Running and fitness training
Most international running events, including the World Marathon Majors (Tokyo, Boston, London, Berlin, Chicago, New York), mark distances in kilometers on course signs. US runners following a European training plan see weekly mileage in kilometers. European runners entering US races see distances in miles. A GPS watch set to the wrong unit during a race produces pace alerts in the wrong system, which creates confusion at exactly the moment you need clarity.
Common use cases include converting race distances (5K, 10K, half marathon, marathon), translating international speed limits from km/h to mph, planning road trips in countries that use the opposite system, and converting fitness tracker data between units.
Aviation and altitude
Altitude in aviation is measured in feet in the US and many ICAO-compliant countries, but mountain elevations are reported in meters and kilometers in most of the world. Mount Everest’s summit at 8.849 km is 5.498 miles or 29,032 feet. Commercial cruising altitude at 10–12 km is 6.2–7.5 miles or 32,800–39,370 feet. Converting between these figures is routine for pilots, dispatchers, and anyone working with international flight data.
Cycling and endurance sport
European cycling events, including the Tour de France and its Grand Tour siblings, measure stage distances in kilometers. US cycling events, including many gran fondos and centuries, use miles. A “century ride” is 100 miles (160.93 km). A “metric century” is 100 km (62.14 miles). These two rides differ by 38% in distance; knowing which one you have signed up for matters significantly in training.
Mapping and navigation apps
Navigation apps including Google Maps and Apple Maps allow switching between km and miles, but exported data, embedded maps, and third-party integrations often lock to one system. Developers building logistics tools, delivery routing systems, or geographic analysis platforms work with both units depending on the target region. Converting accurately at the data layer prevents downstream errors in distance calculations and ETA estimates.
Race Distance Reference Table
| Race / Distance | Kilometers (km) | Miles (mi) |
|---|---|---|
| 1K | 1 | 0.621 |
| 5K | 5 | 3.107 |
| 8K | 8 | 4.971 |
| 10K | 10 | 6.214 |
| 15K | 15 | 9.321 |
| 10 miles | 16.093 | 10 |
| Half marathon | 21.0975 | 13.109 |
| Marathon | 42.195 | 26.219 |
| 50K ultra | 50 | 31.069 |
| 100K ultra | 100 | 62.137 |
| 100 miles ultra | 160.934 | 100 |
| Century ride (cycling) | 160.934 | 100 |
| Metric century (cycling) | 100 | 62.137 |
| Ironman triathlon run | 42.195 | 26.219 |
| Ironman triathlon cycle | 180.246 | 112 |
| Ironman total | 226.308 | 140.6 |
Speed Limit Conversion Table: km/h to mph
| km/h | mph | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| 30 | 18.64 | Urban residential zones (EU) |
| 50 | 31.07 | Standard urban speed limit (EU) |
| 60 | 37.28 | Urban arterial roads |
| 80 | 49.71 | Rural roads (many EU countries) |
| 90 | 55.92 | Secondary highways (France, Spain) |
| 100 | 62.14 | Motorways (some countries) |
| 110 | 68.35 | Motorways (Australia, some EU) |
| 120 | 74.56 | Motorways (Italy, Spain, UK) |
| 130 | 80.78 | Motorways (France, Germany unrestricted zones) |
| 140 | 86.99 | Poland motorway limit |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using 0.6 as an exact factor instead of an estimate
Multiplying by 0.6 instead of 0.621371 introduces a 3.4% error. At 100 km, this gives 60 miles instead of the correct 62.14 miles, a gap of 2.14 miles. For casual conversation this is fine. For a race pace calculation, a navigation system, or a fuel consumption estimate, use the full factor or the converter.
Forgetting that km/h and mph use the same conversion factor as km and miles
Speed units convert by exactly the same factor as distance units because speed is distance per unit time, and the time unit (hours) stays the same. 100 km/h × 0.621371 = 62.14 mph. Many people assume speed requires a different formula. It does not.
Confusing “km” with “km/h” in speed limit contexts
A speed limit sign that reads “100” in a metric country means 100 km/h, which is 62.14 mph. It does not mean 100 km (a distance). In a non-metric country, a sign reading “60” means 60 mph, which is 96.56 km/h. Always check the unit label on the sign or your dashboard before interpreting the number.
Using the wrong race distance when planning pace
A 10K race is 6.214 miles, not 6 miles. A half marathon is 13.109 miles, not 13 miles. The difference of 0.1 to 0.2 miles may seem small, but at race pace it changes the expected finish time by 45 to 90 seconds. Using rounded values when calculating target pace produces a pace that is slightly too fast, which causes the runner to go out harder than planned.
Assuming the UK uses kilometers because it uses metric
The UK uses the metric system for most measurements but retains miles for road distances and speed limits officially. A UK road sign showing “60” means 60 mph, not 60 km/h. Visitors from metric countries who assume UK road signs are in km/h will significantly underestimate legal speed limits, which creates its own set of problems on motorways.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many miles is 1 km?
1 kilometer equals 0.621371 miles. Multiply any kilometer value by 0.621371 to get miles. For a quick estimate, multiply by 0.6. The result is within 3% of the exact answer.
What is the formula to convert km to miles?
Miles equals kilometers multiplied by 0.621371. For example, 10 km times 0.621371 equals 6.214 miles. The reverse is: kilometers equals miles multiplied by 1.609344. Both conversion factors come from the 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement, which defined 1 mile as exactly 1,609.344 meters.
What is the Fibonacci trick for converting km to miles?
Consecutive Fibonacci numbers (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34) approximate km-to-mile conversions because the ratio between consecutive Fibonacci numbers approaches the golden ratio (1.618), which is very close to the km-to-miles factor of 1.609. So 5 km is approximately 3 miles, 8 km is approximately 5 miles, and 13 km is approximately 8 miles. Each estimate is within 1% of the correct answer.
How many km is a marathon in miles?
A marathon is 42.195 km, which equals 26.219 miles, commonly rounded to 26.2 miles. The marathon distance was standardized at the 1908 London Olympics when the course was extended from 25 miles to 26 miles 385 yards so runners could finish in front of the royal box at the Olympic Stadium. This distance (42.195 km) became the official marathon distance in 1921.
Which countries use miles instead of kilometers?
The United States, the United Kingdom, Liberia, and Myanmar are the primary countries that use miles for road distances. The US and UK use miles on road signs and speed limits officially. The UK is stuck in the middle of both systems, being the birthplace of the imperial system itself, where metric is partially adopted but miles persist. Liberia and Myanmar have historically used miles due to US influence and colonial legacy respectively.


