Temperature Unit Conversion Tool

Temperature Conversion

Real-time Conversion (Enter any value to automatically display all units)

Common Temperature References

Description Celsius (°C) Fahrenheit (°F) Kelvin (K)
Absolute Zero -273.15 -459.67 0
Liquid Nitrogen Boiling Point -195.79 -320.42 77.36
Dry Ice Sublimation Point -78.5 -109.3 194.65
Freezing Point of Water 0 32 273.15
Room Temperature (Comfortable) 20-25 68-77 293-298
Normal Human Body Temperature 36.5-37.5 97.7-99.5 309.65-310.65
Boiling Point of Water (Standard Atmospheric Pressure) 100 212 373.15
Medium Oven Temperature 180 356 453.15
Paper Ignition Point 233 451 506.15
Surface Temperature of the Sun ~5500 ~9932 ~5773

Conversion Formulas

Celsius (°C) ↔ Fahrenheit (°F)

°F = (°C × 9/5) + 32
°C = (°F - 32) × 5/9

Celsius (°C) ↔ Kelvin (K)

K = °C + 273.15
°C = K - 273.15

Fahrenheit (°F) ↔ Kelvin (K)

K = (°F - 32) × 5/9 + 273.15
°F = (K - 273.15) × 9/5 + 32

Celsius (°C) ↔ Rankine (°R)

°R = (°C + 273.15) × 9/5
°C = °R × 5/9 - 273.15

Celsius (°C) ↔ Réaumur (°Ré)

°Ré = °C × 4/5
°C = °Ré × 5/4

Batch Conversion (one value per line, format: number unit)

About Temperature Units:

Celsius (°C):The most commonly used temperature scale, with the freezing point of water at 0 degrees and boiling point at 100 degrees. Proposed by Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius in 1742.

Fahrenheit (°F):Mainly used in the United States. Water freezes at 32 degrees and boils at 212 degrees. Proposed by German physicist Daniel Fahrenheit in 1724.

Kelvin (K):The temperature unit in the International System of Units, also known as the absolute temperature scale. 0K (-273.15°C) is absolute zero, the theoretical lowest temperature. The Kelvin scale does not use the "degree" symbol.

Rankine (°R):An absolute temperature scale mainly used in American engineering. 0°R equals absolute zero, equivalent to -459.67°F.

Réaumur (°Ré):A historical temperature scale with water freezing at 0 degrees and boiling at 80 degrees. Mainly used in some European regions for cheese and candy making, now rarely used.