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m Head to kPa Converter — Force Converter
Head Converter
Structural
0

Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter turns metres of water head into kilopascals and back instantly. It also covers feet of water, bar and psi — using the density of water at 4 °C. Type a value, pick your units, and read the result as you type.

One metre of water head is 9.807 kPa. Convert pump head to pressure for gauge and pipe ratings. For general pressure units, see the psi to bar converter.

02

The units it covers

Each unit expresses a pressure or its equivalent liquid column, converting through the kilopascal.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
KilopascalkPa1SI pressure
Metre of waterm H₂O9.80665Pump & pipe head
Foot of waterft H₂O2.98907US head
Barbar100Process pressure
Pound per square inchpsi6.89476US pressure
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The formula

Each unit has a fixed value in kilopascals, so pressure and head convert through the kPa once (water at 4 °C):

Conversion
result = value × factor_from ÷ factor_to

Where:

  • value = the number you typed, in the “from” unit
  • factor_from = the “from” unit’s value in kilopascals
  • factor_to = the “to” unit’s value in kilopascals
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Worked example

Convert 10 metres of water head to kPa.

Step 1 · The factor
1 m H₂O = 9.80665 kPa
Step 2 · Multiply
10 × 9.80665 = 98.07 kPa

So 10 metres of water head is about 98.1 kPa.

05

The units in this example

Metre of watersymbol: m H₂O

A water column height representing pressure — the usual way to state pump head and static lift.

Common head conversions
  • 1 m H₂O ≈ 9.807 kPa
  • 1 m H₂O ≈ 3.281 ft H₂O
  • 1 m H₂O ≈ 0.0981 bar
  • 1 m H₂O ≈ 1.422 psi
Kilopascalsymbol: kPa

The SI pressure unit used for gauge readings and pipe ratings in water systems.

Common head conversions
  • 1 kPa ≈ 0.102 m H₂O
  • 1 kPa ≈ 0.335 ft H₂O
  • 1 kPa = 0.01 bar
  • 1 kPa ≈ 0.145 psi
06

FAQ

QHow many metres of head is 100 kPa?
About 10.2 metres of water head.
QDoes water temperature matter?
Slightly — these factors use water at 4 °C; warmer water gives marginally less head per kPa.
08

Sources

USGS — water density · NIST SP 811 — SI units

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team