A knot is the standard unit of speed used in aviation and maritime operations. One knot equals one nautical mile per hour, or precisely 1.852 kilometers per hour (km/h) or 1.1508 miles per hour (mph).
The abbreviation is kt (plural: kt or kts, depending on regional usage), and it is used in aircraft performance, wind reporting, and navigation.
| Speed | In Knots | In km/h | In mph |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 kt | 1 | 1.852 | 1.151 |
| 50 kt | 50 | 92.6 | 57.5 |
| 100 kt | 100 | 185.2 | 115.1 |
| 250 kt | 250 | 463 | 288 |
| 500 kt | 500 | 926 | 575 |
| Application | Example |
|---|---|
| Aircraft speed | “Cruising at 120 kt” |
| Wind reports | “Wind 260 degrees at 18 kt” |
| Minimum/maximum approach speeds | “Final approach speed is 65 kt” |
| Speed limits in airspace | “Maximum 250 kt below FL100” |
Knots are used in both Indicated Airspeed (IAS) and True Airspeed (TAS) values, as well as for groundspeed (GS), depending on context.