Temperature Converter
Convert between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin.
Result
32
°F
Common Temperature References
Freezing point of water: 0°C = 32°F = 273.15K
Boiling point of water: 100°C = 212°F = 373.15K
Body temperature: 37°C = 98.6°F = 310.15K
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I convert Celsius to Fahrenheit?
To convert C to F, multiply by 9/5 and add 32. Formula: F = (C × 9/5) + 32. For example, 100°C = (100 × 9/5) + 32 = 212°F.
What is absolute zero?
Absolute zero is -273.15°C or -459.67°F, which is the coldest possible temperature where all molecular motion stops.
How do you convert Celsius to Kelvin?
To convert C to K, simply add 273.15. Formula: K = C + 273.15. For example, 0°C = 273.15K.
Overview
Temperature is one of the few everyday measurements with no single global unit. Most of the world uses Celsius, the United States still uses Fahrenheit for weather, cooking, and body temperature, and scientists work almost exclusively in Kelvin. The temperature-converter on this page switches between the four scales in common use: Celsius (°C), Fahrenheit (°F), Kelvin (K), and Rankine (°R).
The four scales are built on different reference points. Celsius sets 0 °C at the freezing point of water and 100 °C at the boiling point, both at standard atmospheric pressure. Fahrenheit sets 32 °F at freezing and 212 °F at boiling, a 180-degree spread, so each Fahrenheit degree is smaller than a Celsius degree. Kelvin is the SI base unit of thermodynamic temperature and starts at absolute zero, the coldest possible temperature, where molecular motion stops. Rankine is the absolute-scale version of Fahrenheit, used mostly in older US engineering work. The relationship between any two scales is a linear equation because both endpoints are fixed.
The two key formulas to remember: °F = °C × 9/5 + 32, and K = °C + 273.15. Going the other way, °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9, and °R = °F + 459.67. A few reference values that come up often: 0 °C is 32 °F or 273.15 K, 25 °C is 77 °F or 298.15 K, 100 °C is 212 °F or 373.15 K, and absolute zero is −273.15 °C, 0 K, −459.67 °F, or 0 °R.
A common trap is the offset. A 1 °C change is a 1.8 °F change, not 1 °F, and a 1 K change equals a 1 °C change exactly because both are SI units on the same scale. This matters for cooking (an oven recipe in °F should not be converted by simple subtraction) and for science (a temperature of 300 K is the same step as 27 °C above 273 K). The converter handles all of these at once, so a single number populates every field at the same precision.
How to use
- Type a value in any of the four fields: Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin, or Rankine.
- The other three scales update automatically at the same precision.
- Use Kelvin or Rankine for scientific work and physics; use Celsius or Fahrenheit for daily use.
- Clear the form to start a new conversion; the precision matches the digits entered.
Formula
Interpreting your results
Negative values on Kelvin or Rankine are physically impossible and indicate an input below absolute zero, which the laws of thermodynamics do not allow. Celsius and Fahrenheit can both be negative, but only below their respective zero points (0 °C is freezing water, 0 °F is colder than freezing and was originally based on a brine mixture). For body temperature, 37.0 °C is the classic normal reading and 38.0 °C is the common fever threshold; in Fahrenheit those are 98.6 °F and 100.4 °F, the value most US medical guides quote.