Free Calculators for Canadian Users
Canada is officially metric but borders the United States and shares much of its culture and media. As a result, Canadians regularly switch between metric and imperial units in daily life. Road distances are in kilometres. Body weight is commonly given in pounds. Recipes from the US use cups and Fahrenheit.
This guide covers the unit conversions and calculator tools most useful for Canadian users across measurement, health and personal finance. All tools are free at CalConvs.com.
Distance and Speed in Canada
Canadian roads use kilometres and km/h officially. However, many Canadians still mentally translate speeds and distances into miles due to proximity to the US and older habits.
Canadian Speed Limit Reference (km/h and mph)
30 km/h = 18.6 mph (school zones and playground areas)
50 km/h = 31.1 mph (standard urban speed limit across Canada)
80 km/h = 49.7 mph (rural roads outside built-up areas)
100 km/h = 62.1 mph (standard highway speed limit)
110 km/h = 68.4 mph (some highways in Alberta, BC and Ontario)
Use the Speed Converter for any km/h to mph conversion. Use the Length Converter for kilometres to miles.
Weight: Pounds and Kilograms in Canada
Officially metric, but body weight in everyday Canadian conversation is almost always given in pounds. Medical records use kilograms. Gym equipment and nutrition labels use kilograms. Scales at home often show both.
| Pounds | Kilograms |
|---|---|
| 120 lbs | 54.4 kg |
| 130 lbs | 59.0 kg |
| 140 lbs | 63.5 kg |
| 150 lbs | 68.0 kg |
| 160 lbs | 72.6 kg |
| 170 lbs | 77.1 kg |
| 180 lbs | 81.6 kg |
| 200 lbs | 90.7 kg |
Use the Weight and Mass Converter to switch between pounds and kilograms. When using the BMI Calculator, convert to kilograms before entering.
Temperature: Celsius in Canada, Fahrenheit from US Media
Canada uses Celsius officially for all weather, cooking and science. However, Canadians near the US border frequently encounter Fahrenheit in American media and may need to convert.
| Celsius | Fahrenheit | Context |
|---|---|---|
| -20 C | -4 F | Cold winter day in prairie provinces |
| -10 C | 14 F | Cold winter, common in most of Canada |
| 0 C | 32 F | Freezing point, common in spring and autumn |
| 10 C | 50 F | Cool day in spring or autumn |
| 20 C | 68 F | Pleasant summer temperature |
| 30 C | 86 F | Hot summer day in Ontario or BC |
| 35 C | 95 F | Heatwave conditions |
Cooking: US Recipes and Canadian Kitchens
Many recipes Canadians follow come from US sources and use cups, fluid ounces and Fahrenheit oven temperatures. Canadian and US cups are the same size. Oven temperatures are almost always given in Fahrenheit in North American recipes.
| Fahrenheit | Celsius | Oven Type |
|---|---|---|
| 250 F | 121 C | Very low oven |
| 325 F | 163 C | Low oven |
| 350 F | 177 C | Moderate oven (most common baking temperature) |
| 375 F | 191 C | Medium-hot |
| 400 F | 204 C | Hot oven |
| 425 F | 218 C | Very hot |
| 450 F | 232 C | Very hot for pizza and bread |
Use the Temperature Converter and the Volume Converter for recipe conversions.
Canadian Health Tools
Canadian healthcare uses metric units. Height is in metres and centimetres. Weight is in kilograms. All clinical measurements follow the metric standard. Use these health tools for any wellness or fitness goal.
- BMI Calculator: used by Canadian health organisations using the same WHO classifications
- TDEE Calculator: daily calorie needs, relevant for Canadian nutrition guidelines
- Ideal Weight Calculator: healthy weight range in both kg and lbs
- Pregnancy Calculator: due date and trimester tracking, works for any location worldwide
Canadian Finance Notes
While CalConvs finance tools use US dollar amounts and US-specific account types like 401k and IRA, the underlying mathematical concepts apply equally to Canadian retirement planning with TFSAs and RRSPs. The compound growth, inflation and spending calculations are universally applicable.
- Inflation Calculator: Canada's long-run inflation target is 2 percent, the same as in many countries. Use this to model future purchasing power in Canadian dollars.
- Retirement Calculator: model savings growth using your Canadian retirement account contributions
- Mortgage Calculator: Canadian mortgage payments work the same mathematically. Enter your loan amount in Canadian dollars.
Related Tools for Canadian Users
- Length Converter: km to miles and all other distances
- Speed Converter: km/h and mph
- Temperature Converter: Celsius and Fahrenheit
- Volume Converter: litres, US cups and gallons
- All Unit Converters: browse all converters on CalConvs
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do Canadians use pounds for body weight if Canada is metric?
Canada metricated officially in the 1970s and 1980s, but cultural habits take longer to change than legislation. The strong US media presence in Canada, shared language with American content, and proximity to the US border mean that pounds remain the dominant unit in everyday Canadian conversation about body weight, even as kilograms appear on medical records and gym equipment.
Are Canadian cups the same as US cups?
Yes. The Canadian cup (250 ml by metric definition) and the US cup (236.6 ml) are slightly different in volume. In practice, most Canadian and US recipes treat them as interchangeable. For baking, where precision matters more, the difference of about 13 ml per cup is small enough that most recipes still work correctly with either cup size.
What is the speed limit in km/h on Canadian highways?
The standard highway speed limit across most of Canada is 100 km/h (62.1 mph). Some provincial highways in Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario allow 110 km/h (68.4 mph). School zones are typically 30 km/h and urban areas are usually 50 km/h. Speed limits in Canada are always posted in kilometres per hour on signed metric roads.
Do Canadian TFSA and RRSP work like US Roth IRA and 401k?
There are similarities. The TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account) works similarly to a Roth IRA, contributions are after-tax and withdrawals are tax-free. The RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan) works similarly to a Traditional IRA or 401k, contributions reduce taxable income now and withdrawals are taxed as income in retirement. The underlying compound growth mathematics is identical; only the specific rules, limits and tax treatments differ.
