KM to Miles: The 0.62 Rule and Conversion Chart
One number unlocks almost every km-to-miles conversion you'll ever need: 0.621371. Multiply any kilometer value by that, and you have miles. The trick is knowing when to use the full precision, when the rounded 0.62 is close enough, and how a quirk of the Fibonacci sequence gives you a nearly perfect shortcut with zero arithmetic. This guide covers all three, plus a ready-made table for the distances that come up most — running races, road signs, and highway speed limits.
The Exact Factor and Where It Comes From
One mile is defined as exactly 1,609.344 meters, or 1.609344 km. Flip that fraction and you get the conversion factor from km to miles:
1 ÷ 1.609344 = 0.621371...
For most everyday purposes, 0.6214 is precise enough. For casual mental math, 0.62 introduces only a 0.2% error — negligible unless you are calculating a navigation route over hundreds of kilometers.
The reverse is equally simple: to go from miles to km, multiply by 1.60934, or use 1.6 as a quick approximation.
The Fibonacci Trick: No Calculator Needed
The Fibonacci sequence — 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144… — has a remarkable property: the ratio of consecutive terms converges to the golden ratio, approximately 1.618. That is astonishingly close to the km-per-mile value of 1.60934.
This means: any two consecutive Fibonacci numbers give you an almost-exact km-to-miles pair.
- 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)
- 55 km ≈ 34 miles (exact: 34.175)
- 89 km ≈ 55 miles (exact: 55.302)
The error stays under 1% for any Fibonacci pair above 5/8. For a quick gut-check on a road trip or a race pace, this trick is genuinely useful and requires zero multiplication.
Running Race Distances: The Numbers Every Runner Should Know
Race distances are set in kilometers internationally but discussed in miles in the US and UK. Here are the standard races with both values:
| Race | Kilometers | Miles | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Mile | 1.609 km | 1.000 mi | Classic track/road event |
| 5K | 5.000 km | 3.107 mi | Most popular road race distance |
| 10K | 10.000 km | 6.214 mi | Common club and charity race |
| Half Marathon | 21.098 km | 13.109 mi | Exactly half of a full marathon |
| Marathon | 42.195 km | 26.219 mi | Set at the 1908 London Olympics |
| 50K Ultramarathon | 50.000 km | 31.069 mi | Shortest standard ultra distance |
| 100K Ultramarathon | 100.000 km | 62.137 mi | IAU world championship distance |
The marathon's odd 42.195 km (26 miles 385 yards) traces back to the distance from Windsor Castle to the Olympic stadium finish line in 1908 — standardized permanently in 1921.
Speed Limits: Reading Foreign Road Signs
Speed limits are where this conversion matters most in daily life. Most of the world posts limits in km/h; the US and UK use mph. Here are the common posted values side by side:
| Posted (km/h) | Equivalent (mph) | Typical context |
|---|---|---|
| 30 km/h | 18.6 mph | School zones, urban residential |
| 50 km/h | 31.1 mph | Standard urban/city roads |
| 60 km/h | 37.3 mph | Suburban arterials |
| 80 km/h | 49.7 mph | Rural roads, secondary highways |
| 100 km/h | 62.1 mph | Most national highways outside US |
| 110 km/h | 68.4 mph | Australian freeways, some EU motorways |
| 120 km/h | 74.6 mph | EU motorways (standard) |
| 130 km/h | 80.8 mph | France, Germany unrestricted segments |
A quick rule of thumb for speed: divide km/h by 8 and multiply by 5. That is the same as multiplying by 0.625, which is within 0.6% of the true factor. So 100 km/h ÷ 8 × 5 = 62.5 mph — the actual answer is 62.14 mph.
Worked Examples Using the 0.621 Rule
Here are four quick calculations showing the formula in action:
- 5K race pace: A runner finishes in 25 minutes. Their pace is 5:00/km. In miles: 5.00 × 0.6214 = 3.107 miles, so pace is roughly 8:03/mile.
- City driving: You see a 90 km/h limit. 90 × 0.6214 = 55.9 mph — essentially the US 55 mph highway standard.
- Distance on a rental car odometer: The car shows 320 km driven. 320 × 0.6214 = 198.8 miles — just under 200.
- Marathon goal time: You want to run sub-4 hours. The course is 42.195 km. Divide 240 minutes by 42.195 km = 5:41/km required pace, or 5:41 × 1.6093 = 9:09/mile.
For anything beyond quick mental checks, use a calculator or the converter on this page — especially for navigation, where a 0.2% rounding error over 500 km becomes a 1 km discrepancy.
Quick Reference: Common Distances
| Kilometers | Miles (exact) | Miles (rounded) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 km | 0.6214 | 0.62 |
| 2 km | 1.2427 | 1.24 |
| 5 km | 3.1069 | 3.11 |
| 10 km | 6.2137 | 6.21 |
| 20 km | 12.427 | 12.43 |
| 50 km | 31.069 | 31.07 |
| 100 km | 62.137 | 62.14 |
| 500 km | 310.686 | 310.69 |
| 1000 km | 621.371 | 621.37 |
Notice that 1,000 km = 621.371 miles — which is why the conversion factor is sometimes remembered as the first three digits of 621. The pattern is exact and makes large-distance estimates easy to sanity-check.
Preguntas frecuentes
Is 0.62 accurate enough, or should I use 0.621371?+
For distances under 50 km, 0.62 introduces less than 0.2% error — roughly 100 meters per 50 km. For navigation, race timing, or any calculation where precision matters, use 0.621371 or the full value of 1 ÷ 1.609344.
How does the Fibonacci trick work for km to miles?+
Consecutive Fibonacci numbers (like 8 and 13) have a ratio close to 1.618, which is very near the 1.609 km-per-mile value. So any Fibonacci pair — 8 km ≈ 5 miles, 13 km ≈ 8 miles — gives you a conversion accurate to within about 1%.
Why is a marathon 42.195 km and not a round number?+
The marathon distance was standardized based on the 1908 London Olympics course — 26 miles 385 yards from Windsor Castle to the Olympic stadium. The International Association of Athletics Federations fixed it at that length permanently in 1921, which converts to 42.195 km.
What is 100 km/h in mph?+
100 km/h equals 62.14 mph. A handy shortcut: divide by 8 and multiply by 5 to get 62.5 mph, which is within 0.6% of the true answer.
How do I convert miles back to kilometers?+
Multiply miles by 1.60934. For a quick mental estimate, multiply by 1.6 — the error is under 0.1% for any practical distance.