How to Convert Celsius to Kelvin

Kelvin is the SI (International System of Units) base unit for temperature, used primarily in scientific contexts. Unlike Celsius and Fahrenheit, Kelvin is an absolute temperature scaleβ€”it starts at absolute zero, the coldest possible temperature where all molecular motion stops.

Converting Celsius to Kelvin is one of the simplest temperature conversions because the two scales use the same size degree; Kelvin is simply shifted by 273.15.

The Conversion Formula

K = Β°C + 273.15

Going the other direction:

Β°C = K βˆ’ 273.15

Step-by-Step Examples

Example 1: Water boils at 100Β°C. What is that in Kelvin?

  • 100 + 273.15 = 373.15 K

Example 2: Absolute zero is 0 K. What is that in Celsius?

  • 0 βˆ’ 273.15 = βˆ’273.15Β°C

Reference Table

CelsiusKelvinContext
βˆ’273.15Β°C0 KAbsolute zero
βˆ’196Β°C77.15 KLiquid nitrogen boils
0Β°C273.15 KWater freezes
20Β°C293.15 KRoom temperature
37Β°C310.15 KBody temperature
100Β°C373.15 KWater boils

Why Scientists Use Kelvin

Kelvin is essential in thermodynamics because many physical laws (like the Ideal Gas Law: PV = nRT) require absolute temperature. Using Celsius in these equations would give incorrect results because 0Β°C is not the absence of heatβ€”it's just the freezing point of water.

Use our Celsius-to-Kelvin calculator for quick scientific temperature conversions.