Convert Centimeter to Kilometer (cm → km)
The centimeter is the everyday metric unit for body measurements, clothing sizes, and furniture dimensions.
Centimeter to Kilometer Conversion Table
10 common values| Centimeter | Kilometer |
|---|---|
| 1 cm | 0.00001 km |
| 5 cm | 0.00005 km |
| 10 cm | 0.0001 km |
| 25 cm | 0.00025 km |
| 50 cm | 0.0005 km |
| 100 cm | 0.001 km |
| 250 cm | 0.0025 km |
| 500 cm | 0.005 km |
| 1,000 cm | 0.01 km |
| 5,000 cm | 0.05 km |
How to Convert Centimeter to Kilometer Manually
Step by StepConverting centimeters to kilometers is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in centimetersStart with the number of centimeters (cm) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.00001The conversion factor from cm to km is 0.00001. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in kilometersThe result is your value in kilometers (km).
Formula
Multiply the value in centimeters by 0.00001. For the reverse direction, multiply by 100,000.
km = cm × 0.00001cm = km × 100,000Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 cm ≈ 0.394 inches — divide cm by 2.54 for a precise inch conversion.
- Your little finger is about 1 cm wide at the nail — useful when no ruler is nearby.
- 100 cm = 1 metre exactly. Always convert to metres for architectural plans.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing linear cm with square cm. 21 cm of ribbon is not the same as 21 cm² of fabric.
- Using 2.5 instead of 2.54 for inch conversion — the 1.6% error grows on long measurements.
- Reading a clothing size label as cm when it is actually an EU size code (e.g. size 42 ≠ 42 cm).
About Centimeter and Kilometer
What is the Centimeter?
The centimeter equals one hundredth of a meter (0.01 m) and is the everyday metric unit for body measurements, clothing, furniture, and household items. It bridges the gap between the meter (too large for personal items) and the millimeter (too small for clothing). The centimeter is widely used in countries with metric systems for height (a person is 160–185 cm tall), paper sizes (A4 is 21 × 29.7 cm), and medical measurements. Although not strictly an SI base unit, it is one of the most common units in daily metric usage. The centimeter relates to the inch (1 cm ≈ 0.394 in) and to the millimeter (1 cm = 10 mm). It became standard with the metric system's adoption across continental Europe in the 19th century.
- Height and body measurements in medical records
- Ready-to-wear clothing sizes in Europe and Asia
- Furniture and interior design dimensions
An average adult is 160–185 cm tall. An A4 sheet is 21 × 29.7 cm. A standard passport photo is 3.5 × 4.5 cm.
What is the Kilometer?
The kilometer equals exactly 1,000 meters and is the international standard unit for road distances, geography, and travel. Adopted as part of the metric system in the 1790s, it became the dominant road-distance unit worldwide except in the United States, the United Kingdom (which uses miles for road signs), and Myanmar. Speed limits across Europe, Asia, Australia, Africa, and Latin America are expressed in km/h. The kilometer's relationship to the meter is decimal and exact, making it ideal for scientific work. A kilometer takes a healthy adult about 12 minutes to walk and roughly 1,250 average steps. Geographic distances — from city blocks to airline routes — are typically given in kilometers, with the Earth's equatorial circumference measuring approximately 40,075 km.
- Motorway distances on road signs across Europe
- Marathon and long-distance running (marathon = 42.195 km)
- GPS navigation and driving directions globally
London to Paris by Eurostar is 344 km. A full marathon is 42.195 km. Most European motorway speed limits are 120–130 km/h.