⚖️ kg to ton — Kilogram to US Short Ton Converter

Convert weight and mass units — kilograms, pounds, grams, ounces, tons, carats and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 kg = 0.001102311 ton
Quick Answer — Formula1 kg = 0.001102311 tonMultiply kilograms by 0.001102311 to get us short tons.Reverse: 1 ton = 907.185 kg
UnitNameValue
0.001 kg1.10231e-06 ton
0.01 kg1.10231e-05 ton
0.1 kg0.000110231 ton
1 kg0.00110231 ton
5 kg0.00551155 ton
10 kg0.0110231 ton
50 kg0.0551155 ton
100 kg0.110231 ton
1000 kg1.10231 ton

About Kilogram to US Short Ton Conversion

The Milligram (mg) and the Gram (g) are both units of weight & mass. Converting between them is straightforward using the formula above.

Formula: 1 kg = 0.001102311 ton

This converter uses internationally recognized conversion factors. All calculations are performed client-side in your browser — no data is sent to any server.

Worked Examples: Kilogram to US Short Ton

A loaded cement truck
25 kg = 0.02755777 ton
A standard concrete mixer truck carries about 25 metric tons (27.5 short tons) of ready-mix concrete — a typical pour for a residential foundation.
Container ship cargo
10,000 kg = 11.02311 ton
A large container ship can carry 10,000–20,000 metric tons of cargo per voyage. Freight rates are quoted per metric ton globally.
Annual wheat harvest
100 kg = 0.1102311 ton
A small farm producing 100 metric tons of wheat in a season. Global grain trade benchmarks are all quoted in metric tons.
A fully loaded jumbo jet
400 kg = 0.4409244 ton
A Boeing 747-400 freighter has a maximum payload of about 113 metric tons — illustrating the scale of bulk ton measurements.

Kilogram to US Short Ton Reference Table

Kilogram (kg)US Short Ton (ton)Real-world context
1 kg0.00110231 tonbag of flour / sugar
100 kg0.1102311 tonlarge adult / small sofa
1000 kg1.102311 ton
10000 kg11.02311 ton
100000 kg110.2311 ton

Mental Math Tricks: Kilogram to US Short Ton

Divide by 907.185
Since the factor is small (0.00110231), it's easier to divide: ton value ÷ 907.185 = kg value.
Use scientific notation
1 kg = 1.10e-03 ton. Count decimal places carefully.
Think in larger units first
Convert to a more familiar unit first, then to ton.

When to Convert Kilogram to US Short Ton

🚢 International Shipping Freight rates are quoted in kg or ton depending on the carrier. Accurate conversion avoids billing disputes and customs declaration errors.
🏗️ Construction Concrete, steel, and aggregates are ordered in bulk weight. Converting kg to ton is routine for quantity surveyors and site managers.
🌾 Agriculture Crop yields and commodity prices are quoted per ton internationally but may be reported locally in kg. Conversion is essential for market analysis.
⚙️ Manufacturing Raw material procurement and inventory management require converting between kg and ton for specifications from different suppliers.
📊 Commodity Trading Global commodity exchanges quote in metric tons; local markets may use kg. Traders need accurate Kilogram-to-US Short Ton conversion for position sizing.
♻️ Waste Management Municipal and industrial waste is measured in kg for landfill permits and recycling targets. Convert to ton for international reporting standards.

Frequently Asked Questions — Kilogram to US Short Ton

1 kilogram (kg) equals exactly 0.00110231 US short tons (ton). Use the formula: kg × 0.00110231 = ton.

To convert kilograms to US short tons, multiply your value in kilograms by 0.00110231. For example, 5 kg × 0.00110231 = 0.00551155 ton.

100 kilograms = 0.1102311 US short tons. Calculation: 100 × 0.00110231 = 0.1102311.

To convert US short tons back to kilograms, divide by 0.00110231 (or multiply by 907.185). Example: 10 ton ÷ 0.00110231 = 9071.85 kg.

Yes. This converter uses the internationally recognised exact conversion factor: 1 kg = 0.00110231 ton. All calculations are performed in your browser with no rounding until display.

10 kilograms = 0.01102311 US short tons. Simply multiply by 0.00110231.

Converting kilograms to US short tons is commonly needed for freight logistics, commodity trading, construction material procurement, and agricultural reporting where one system uses kg and another uses ton.

Understanding Kilogram and US Short Ton

Kilogram (kg)

The kilogram (kg) is the SI base unit of mass — one of seven fundamental units in the International System. Equal to exactly 1,000 grams, it is the foundation of weight measurement in science, medicine, engineering, and commerce worldwide. Uniquely among SI base units, the kilogram is named with a metric prefix ("kilo-" = 1,000).

US Short Ton (ton)

The US short ton (commonly just "ton" in American usage) equals exactly 2,000 avoirdupois pounds or approximately 907.18474 kilograms. It is the standard bulk commodity unit for coal, steel, cement, and freight in the United States. The "short" qualifier distinguishes it from the UK long ton (2,240 lb) and metric ton (1,000 kg).

History of the Kilogram

Defined in 1795 by the French Revolutionary government as the mass of one cubic decimetre of distilled water at 4 °C. A platinum prototype (the Kilogramme des Archives) was created in 1799. From 1889 until 2019, the world's mass standard was the International Prototype Kilogram — a platinum-iridium cylinder stored in Sèvres, France. In 2019, the kilogram was redefined in terms of Planck's constant (h = 6.626 070 15 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s), eliminating the need for a physical artifact.

Interesting fact: The IPK and its official copies drifted apart by up to 50 micrograms over 130 years, motivating the 2019 redefinition. The kilogram is the only SI unit whose name starts with a prefix.

History of the US Short Ton

The short ton emerged in the United States as commerce adopted 2,000 pounds as a round-number bulk standard, diverging from the British 2,240-lb long ton. It was codified in the US Customary system in the 19th century. US coal production, steel output, and grain yields are still reported in short tons domestically, though international trade uses metric tons. The US is one of only three countries (with Myanmar and Liberia) not officially on the metric system.

Interesting fact: A fully loaded standard US freight car carries approximately 100 short tons of cargo. The US historically produced ~1 billion short tons of coal per year; modern US coal consumption has fallen to about 400–500 million short tons annually.