Temperature Converter

Convert between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin instantly. Includes baking and oven reference points.

Runs entirely in your browser. Nothing is sent to our servers.

Edit any field — the others update instantly. Negative numbers welcome.
Common reference points

About this tool

Converts between Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin in real time. Edit any field; the others update automatically. Useful when reading a US recipe in Fahrenheit, dialing in an oven, checking a fever, or doing physics homework.

The formulas

  • °F = °C × 9/5 + 32
  • °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9
  • K = °C + 273.15

Unlike length or weight conversions, temperature is linear with an offset, not just a scaling factor. That's why you can't say "1°C = some-number-of-°F" the way you can say "1 kg = 2.205 lb".

Quick reference for Canadians

  • 0°C = 32°F — water freezing point
  • 20°C = 68°F — comfortable room temperature
  • 37°C = 98.6°F — normal body temperature
  • 100°C = 212°F — water boiling at sea level
  • 180°C = 350°F — most common baking temperature
  • 200°C = 400°F — roasting / hotter bake
  • −40°C = −40°F — the one place where the scales meet

Frequently asked questions

Why is body temperature 37°C and not 37.0°C exactly?
37°C is the long-standing textbook value but real human body temperature varies. Studies in the past decade have shown the modern average is closer to 36.6°C, with normal range roughly 36.1–37.2°C. A "fever" is generally clinically defined as 38°C or higher.
What about Rankine?
Rankine (°R) is Fahrenheit's absolute-zero equivalent — like Kelvin but using the Fahrenheit-sized degree. It's used in some US engineering contexts but rare elsewhere. Convert with °R = °F + 459.67.
Why does the oven temperature differ between my recipe sources?
Most baking happens in the 165°C–230°C range. US recipes use Fahrenheit (325°F–450°F), and there's rounding noise when translating. 350°F is exactly 176.7°C but every Canadian oven calls it "180°C" — that 3-degree gap is normal and won't affect your baking.
Can I use negative Kelvin?
No. Kelvin is an absolute scale starting at absolute zero (−273.15°C). The tool will let you enter negative Kelvin values mathematically, but physically you can't go below 0 K.

Last updated: May 17, 2026