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Convert Metric Tons to Kilograms

Instantly convert Metric Tons (t) to Kilograms (kg) with our free online calculator.

Reviewed by Christopher FloiedUpdated

Formula: t to kgmultiply by 1000

Reference Table

Metric Tons (t)Kilograms (kg)
11000
55000
1010000
2525000
5050000
100100000

How to Convert Metric Tons to Kilograms

Formula

To convert Metric Tons (t) to Kilograms (kg): multiply by 1000

Step-by-Step

  1. Start with your value in Metric Tons (t).
  2. Multiply by 1000 to perform the conversion.
  3. The result is your value expressed in Kilograms (kg).

Conversion Factor

1 t = 1000 kg

Reverse Factor

1 kg = 0.001 t

Worked Example

Convert 25 Metric Tons to Kilograms: 25 t = 25000 kg

About Metric Ton (t)

A metric unit of mass equal to exactly 1,000 kg ≈ 2,204.62 lb. The metric ton — also called 'tonne' in international English (the official BIPM SI Brochure spelling) — is the global commodity unit for bulk shipping per IMO + ICAO, industrial manufacturing per ISO 9001 + ISO 14001 production reporting, agricultural yield (USDA WASDE reports global crop production in million metric tons: 2024 global wheat ~790 Mt, corn 1,200 Mt, soybeans 410 Mt, rice 530 Mt, palm oil 80 Mt; FAO reporting in Mt or kt), steel production (worldsteel.org global crude steel ~1,900 Mt/year, China ~1,020 Mt, India 140 Mt, Japan 87 Mt, USA 80 Mt), and CO₂ emissions reporting per IPCC AR6 + UNFCCC + Carbon Brief / Our World in Data (global anthropogenic 37 Gt CO₂/yr = 37,000 Mt; per-capita US ~16 t/yr, China 8.3 t, EU 6.5 t, India 1.9 t per 2023 data; airliner round-trip NYC-LON 1.6 t CO₂ per passenger). Reference values: a typical 40 ft shipping container max gross 30 t; loaded Class-8 semi-truck 36 t US (80,000 lb GVW); standard passenger car curb weight 1.0-2.5 t; Saturn V rocket fully fueled 2,970 t. Distinct from US short ton (2,000 lb = 907.18 kg) and UK long ton (2,240 lb = 1,016.05 kg).

About Kilogram (kg)

The SI base unit of mass per ISO 80000-3 §3-4 and BIPM SI Brochure 9th edition, redefined in 2019 by fixing the Planck constant h = 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s exactly. The kilogram was historically defined (1889-2019) by the International Prototype of the Kilogram (IPK) — a platinum-iridium cylinder at BIPM Pavillon de Breteuil in Sèvres, France — but the 2019 redefinition tied it to a fundamental constant, removing the only remaining artifact-based SI base unit. The kilogram is realized in practice by the Kibble (watt) balance method at NIST, NPL, NIM, NRC Canada, KRISS, and ~12 other national metrology institutes worldwide. Reference values: 1 kg of water at 4°C occupies almost exactly 1 liter (a design feature of the original 1795 metric system); typical newborn human 3.0-3.5 kg; ICE-vehicle dry curb weight 1,200-2,500 kg; commercial aircraft Boeing 737 MTOW 79,000 kg, Airbus A380 575,000 kg; cargo container TEU full load 24,000 kg gross. Kilograms are the global standard for: scientific measurement, shipping weights per IMO + IATA + ICAO, food packaging in most of the world per EU Reg 1169/2011 + Codex Alimentarius, body weight outside the US (clinical BMI calculations require kg per WHO), and bulk industrial trade.

Quick Facts

  • 1 Metric Ton equals 1000 Kilograms
  • 1 Kilogram equals 0.001 Metric Tons
  • Metric Ton is a unit of weight & mass
  • Kilogram is a unit of weight & mass
  • This conversion is commonly used in cooking, shipping, fitness, and scientific research
  • The Kilogram belongs to the metric system

Common Metric Ton to Kilogram Conversions

Metric Tons (t)Kilograms (kg)
0.0110
0.1100
0.25250
0.5500
11000
22000
33000
55000
1010000
1515000
2020000
2525000
5050000
7575000
100100000
250250000
500500000
10001000000
50005000000
1000010000000

Understanding Metric Tons

The Metric Ton (symbol: t) is a unit of weight & mass. A metric unit of mass equal to exactly 1,000 kg ≈ 2,204.62 lb. The metric ton — also called 'tonne' in international English (the official BIPM SI Brochure spelling) — is the global commodity unit for bulk shipping per IMO + ICAO, industrial manufacturing per ISO 9001 + ISO 14001 production reporting, agricultural yield (USDA WASDE reports global crop production in million metric tons: 2024 global wheat ~790 Mt, corn 1,200 Mt, soybeans 410 Mt, rice 530 Mt, palm oil 80 Mt; FAO reporting in Mt or kt), steel production (worldsteel.org global crude steel ~1,900 Mt/year, China ~1,020 Mt, India 140 Mt, Japan 87 Mt, USA 80 Mt), and CO₂ emissions reporting per IPCC AR6 + UNFCCC + Carbon Brief / Our World in Data (global anthropogenic 37 Gt CO₂/yr = 37,000 Mt; per-capita US ~16 t/yr, China 8.3 t, EU 6.5 t, India 1.9 t per 2023 data; airliner round-trip NYC-LON 1.6 t CO₂ per passenger). Reference values: a typical 40 ft shipping container max gross 30 t; loaded Class-8 semi-truck 36 t US (80,000 lb GVW); standard passenger car curb weight 1.0-2.5 t; Saturn V rocket fully fueled 2,970 t. Distinct from US short ton (2,000 lb = 907.18 kg) and UK long ton (2,240 lb = 1,016.05 kg).

Metric Tons are commonly used in cooking, shipping, fitness, and scientific research.

Understanding Kilograms

The Kilogram (symbol: kg) is a unit of weight & mass. The SI base unit of mass per ISO 80000-3 §3-4 and BIPM SI Brochure 9th edition, redefined in 2019 by fixing the Planck constant h = 6.62607015 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s exactly. The kilogram was historically defined (1889-2019) by the International Prototype of the Kilogram (IPK) — a platinum-iridium cylinder at BIPM Pavillon de Breteuil in Sèvres, France — but the 2019 redefinition tied it to a fundamental constant, removing the only remaining artifact-based SI base unit. The kilogram is realized in practice by the Kibble (watt) balance method at NIST, NPL, NIM, NRC Canada, KRISS, and ~12 other national metrology institutes worldwide. Reference values: 1 kg of water at 4°C occupies almost exactly 1 liter (a design feature of the original 1795 metric system); typical newborn human 3.0-3.5 kg; ICE-vehicle dry curb weight 1,200-2,500 kg; commercial aircraft Boeing 737 MTOW 79,000 kg, Airbus A380 575,000 kg; cargo container TEU full load 24,000 kg gross. Kilograms are the global standard for: scientific measurement, shipping weights per IMO + IATA + ICAO, food packaging in most of the world per EU Reg 1169/2011 + Codex Alimentarius, body weight outside the US (clinical BMI calculations require kg per WHO), and bulk industrial trade.

It belongs to the metric measurement system.

Kilograms are commonly used in cooking, shipping, fitness, and scientific research.

Why Convert Metric Tons to Kilograms?

Converting between Metric Tons and Kilograms comes up in many real-world situations. Cooks adapting international recipes, shippers calculating freight costs, and fitness enthusiasts tracking body composition all need reliable weight conversions. Scientific laboratories frequently work across measurement systems when referencing global research, making quick and accurate conversion indispensable.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Metric Tons to Kilograms?

A metric unit of mass equal to exactly 1,000 kg ≈ 2,204. To convert Metric Tons to Kilograms, multiply by 1000. For example, 25 t equals 25000 kg.

How many Kilograms are in 1 Metric Ton?

There are 1000 Kilograms in 1 Metric Ton.

How many Metric Tons are in 1 Kilogram?

There are 0.001 Metric Tons in 1 Kilogram.

What is the formula for Metric Ton to Kilogram conversion?

The formula is: multiply by 1000. This means 1 t = 1000 kg.

Is a Metric Ton bigger than a Kilogram?

No. One Metric Ton is smaller than one Kilogram because 1 t equals 1000 kg, which is greater than 1.

When do you need to convert between Metric Tons and Kilograms?

The SI base unit of mass per ISO 80000-3 §3-4 and BIPM SI Brochure 9th edition, redefined in 2019 by fixing the Planck constant h = 6. Metric Ton and Kilogram are both weight units, so conversion comes up whenever one source of information uses one unit and another uses the other — a classic cross-reference challenge in engineering, trade, travel, and everyday life.

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