Convert Kilogram to Pound (kg → lb)
The kilogram is the base SI unit of mass and the global standard for body weight, food, and commerce.
Kilogram to Pound Conversion Table
10 common values| Kilogram | Pound |
|---|---|
| 1 kg | 2.204623 lb |
| 5 kg | 11.023113 lb |
| 10 kg | 22.046226 lb |
| 25 kg | 55.115566 lb |
| 50 kg | 110.23113 lb |
| 100 kg | 220.46226 lb |
| 250 kg | 551.15566 lb |
| 500 kg | 1,102.3113 lb |
| 1,000 kg | 2,204.6226 lb |
| 5,000 kg | 11,023.113 lb |
How to Convert Kilogram to Pound Manually
Step by StepConverting kilograms to pounds is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in kilogramsStart with the number of kilograms (kg) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 2.204623The conversion factor from kg to lb is 2.204623. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in poundsThe result is your value in pounds (lb).
Formula
Multiply the value in kilograms by 2.204623. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.453592.
lb = kg × 2.204623kg = lb × 0.453592Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 kg ≈ 2.205 lb. For quick estimates, double the kg figure and add 10%.
- Body weight is best measured first thing in the morning, after using the bathroom but before breakfast.
- The kg is the only SI base unit whose name contains a prefix — a historical quirk of the metric system.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing mass (kg) with weight-force (newtons) in physics problems.
- Using 2 instead of 2.205 when converting kg to pounds — the 2.5% error matters for airline luggage.
- Writing Kg instead of kg — the correct SI abbreviation is lower-case kg.
About Kilogram and Pound
What is the Kilogram?
The kilogram is the base SI unit of mass. Since May 2019, it has been defined by fixing the numerical value of Planck's constant to exactly 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ joule-seconds — a major shift from the previous definition based on a physical platinum-iridium artifact (the International Prototype Kilogram or 'Le Grand K') stored at the BIPM near Paris since 1889. This redefinition links the kilogram to a fundamental constant of nature, making it reproducible by any sufficiently equipped laboratory. The kilogram is the global standard for body weight (most countries quote weight in kilograms), grocery sales, scientific measurements, and engineering. One liter of pure water at 4°C has a mass of almost exactly 1 kg — a coincidence designed into the original 1795 definition. The kilogram relates to the gram (1,000 g = 1 kg), the metric ton (1,000 kg = 1 t), and the pound (1 kg ≈ 2.205 lb).
- Human body weight in most of the world
- Grocery and retail food quantities in Europe
- Scientific and engineering mass measurements
A litre of water weighs 1 kg at 4 °C. An average adult weighs 60–90 kg. A standard bag of flour is 1 kg.
What is the Pound?
The pound equals exactly 0.45359237 kilograms under the 1959 international yard and pound agreement. The unit's name comes from the Latin 'libra pondo' (a pound by weight), and the abbreviation 'lb' derives from 'libra.' The pound has been the everyday weight unit in English-speaking countries for over a thousand years, with regional variations until 20th-century standardization. Today it remains the primary weight unit in the United States for body weight (a person is '170 lb' rather than 77 kg), groceries, and shipping; in the United Kingdom it persists alongside kilograms, especially for personal weight ('11 stone 4' = 158 lb). The pound relates to the ounce (16 oz = 1 lb), the stone (14 lb = 1 stone), the kilogram (1 lb ≈ 0.454 kg), and the US ton (2,000 lb = 1 ton). The international 'avoirdupois' pound is the common standard, distinct from the troy pound used for precious metals.
- Human body weight in the US and UK
- Grocery and retail food pricing in the US
- Boxing and wrestling weight divisions
An average adult is 130–200 lb. US airline luggage allowance is usually 50 lb (22.7 kg). A gallon of milk weighs about 8.6 lb.