Convert Mile to Light Year (mily)

The statute mile is the official road-distance unit in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Myanmar.

1.701 × 10^-13
1 mi1.701 × 10^-13 lyNIST · BIPM accuracy

Mile to Light Year Conversion Table

10 common values
MileLight Year
1 mi1.701 × 10^-13 ly
5 mi8.505 × 10^-13 ly
10 mi1.701 × 10^-12 ly
25 mi4.253 × 10^-12 ly
50 mi8.505 × 10^-12 ly
100 mi1.701 × 10^-11 ly
250 mi4.253 × 10^-11 ly
500 mi8.505 × 10^-11 ly
1,000 mi1.701 × 10^-10 ly
5,000 mi8.505 × 10^-10 ly

How to Convert Mile to Light Year Manually

Step by Step

Converting miles to light years is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.

  1. 1
    Take your value in miles
    Start with the number of miles (mi) you want to convert.
  2. 2
    Multiply by 1.701 × 10^-13
    The conversion factor from mi to ly is 1.701 × 10^-13. Multiply your value by this number.
  3. 3
    Read the result in light years
    The result is your value in light years (ly).
Practical Examples
1 mi
equals
1.701 × 10^-13 ly
5 mi
equals
8.505 × 10^-13 ly
10 mi
equals
1.701 × 10^-12 ly
25 mi
equals
4.253 × 10^-12 ly
100 mi
equals
1.701 × 10^-11 ly

Formula

Multiply the value in miles by 1.701 × 10^-13. For the reverse direction, multiply by 5,878,606,400,000.

Forwardly = mi × 1.701 × 10^-13
Reversemi = ly × 5,878,606,400,000
Example: 10 mi × 1.701 × 10^-13 = 1.701 × 10^-12 ly

Tips

Use these in everyday conversions
  • 1 mile ≈ 1.6 km. Mental trick: add 60% to the mile figure.
  • A running mile in 4 minutes is an elite pace; a recreational runner covers it in 8–10 minutes.
  • US cars show mph only. Check the speedometer scale before assuming the units.

Common Mistakes

Avoid these
  • Confusing statute miles (1.609 km) with nautical miles (1.852 km) — a 15% gap.
  • Reading a US speedometer as km/h — 70 mph is 112 km/h, not 70.
  • Using 1.5 or 1.6 for quick conversions when precision matters — use 1.609 for engineering or legal documents.

About Mile and Light Year

What is the Mile?

The statute mile equals exactly 1,609.344 meters since the international yard agreement of 1959. The unit traces back to the Roman 'mille passuum' (one thousand paces), each pace being roughly 5 Roman feet, giving 5,000 Roman feet. The modern mile evolved through medieval England, where it was standardized to 5,280 feet by Queen Elizabeth I in 1593. Today it remains the official road-distance unit in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Myanmar. American and British road signs, car speedometers, and athletic tracks (the famous 1-mile run) all use the mile. Distinct from the nautical mile (1,852 m), the statute mile is sometimes called the 'land mile.' London to Edinburgh by road is about 400 miles, and a marathon is exactly 26.22 miles.

  • US and UK motorway distances and speed limits
  • Car odometers in American and British vehicles
  • Track events (mile run, quarter-mile drag racing)
Real-world examples

London to Edinburgh is about 400 miles by road. A marathon is 26.22 miles. US highways typically post 65–75 mph speed limits.

What is the Light Year?

The light-year equals approximately 9,460,730,472,580,800 meters (about 9.461 trillion km) and is the standard astronomical unit for stellar distances. Despite its name, a light-year is a unit of distance, not time — it represents how far light travels in vacuum during one Julian year (365.25 days) at the speed of light (299,792,458 m/s). The nearest star to our Sun, Proxima Centauri, is 4.24 light-years away. The Milky Way galaxy is about 100,000 light-years across, and the observable universe extends roughly 93 billion light-years in diameter. Astronomers more often use the parsec (3.26 light-years) for technical work, but the light-year remains popular in education and science communication because it intuitively conveys both distance and the time light needs to travel that far — which is why we see distant galaxies as they were millions of years ago.

  • Interstellar and galactic distances in astronomy
  • Popular-science descriptions of the observable universe
  • Exoplanet distance reporting in the media
Real-world examples

Proxima Centauri, the nearest star beyond the Sun, is 4.24 ly away. The Milky Way is about 100,000 ly across.

Learn About Both Units

📏 Reference

What is the Mile?

Read the unit page →
📏 Reference

What is the Light Year?

Read the unit page →

Mile to Light Year FAQ

5 questions
How many light years in a mile?
One mile equals 1.701 × 10^-13 light years.
How do I convert miles to light years?
Multiply the mile value by 1.701 × 10^-13 to get the equivalent in light years.
What is 100 miles in light years?
100 miles equals 1.701 × 10^-11 light years.
Is a mile bigger than a light year?
No. 1 mile equals 1.701 × 10^-13 light years, so one mile is smaller.
How to convert miles to light years without a calculator?
Multiply by 0 for a quick estimate; use a calculator for precise results.

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