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50 Degrees Fahrenheit to Degrees Celsius

50 °F = 10 °C (degree Fahrenheitdegree Celsius)

50 °F = 10 °C

50 degrees Fahrenheit (°F) equals 10 degrees Celsius (°C). Temperature conversions are affine — the answer follows the standard scale formula, not a single multiplier.

27.7778
FormulaDegrees Celsius = Degrees Fahrenheit × 0.555556
Quick

When to use degrees Fahrenheitdegrees Celsius

Fahrenheit to Celsius reverses the affine formula: C = (F − 32) × 5/9. A 100 °F fever is 37.8 °C; a 350 °F oven is 176.7 °C. Subtract first, then scale — doing it in the other order is the most common arithmetic error in this conversion. The −40° pivot point is the same in both directions: −40 °C = −40 °F, no other temperature matches itself across the two scales.

How to convert degrees Fahrenheit to degrees Celsius

  1. Start with your value

    Begin with your temperature in degrees Fahrenheit.

  2. Apply the conversion formula

    °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9

  3. Read the result

    The result is the equivalent temperature in degrees Celsius. For example, 100 °F = 37.7778 °C.

Conversion formula

Temperature conversion is affine, not a single multiplication. The exact formula is shown below — it follows directly from the definitions of the degree Fahrenheit and degree Celsius scales.

°C = (°F − 32) × 5/9

Degrees Fahrenheit to Degrees Celsius conversion table

Fifty common reference values, hand-picked for skim utility. Use the calculator above for any value not listed.

Conversion table from degrees Fahrenheit to degrees Celsius
Degrees Fahrenheit (°F)Degrees Celsius (°C)
-50 °F-45.556 °C
-40 °F-40 °C
-30 °F-34.444 °C
-25 °F-31.667 °C
-20 °F-28.889 °C
-15 °F-26.111 °C
-10 °F-23.333 °C
-5 °F-20.556 °C
-2 °F-18.889 °C
-1 °F-18.333 °C
0 °F-17.778 °C
1 °F-17.222 °C
2 °F-16.667 °C
5 °F-15 °C
10 °F-12.222 °C
15 °F-9.4444 °C
18 °F-7.7778 °C
20 °F-6.6667 °C
21 °F-6.1111 °C
22 °F-5.5556 °C
23 °F-5 °C
24 °F-4.4444 °C
25 °F-3.8889 °C
27 °F-2.7778 °C
28 °F-2.2222 °C
30 °F-1.1111 °C
32 °F0 °C
35 °F1.6667 °C
37 °F2.7778 °C
40 °F4.4444 °C
45 °F7.2222 °C
50 °F10 °C
55 °F12.778 °C
60 °F15.556 °C
65 °F18.333 °C
70 °F21.111 °C
75 °F23.889 °C
80 °F26.667 °C
85 °F29.444 °C
90 °F32.222 °C
95 °F35 °C
100 °F37.778 °C
110 °F43.333 °C
120 °F48.889 °C
150 °F65.556 °C
180 °F82.222 °C
200 °F93.333 °C
250 °F121.11 °C
300 °F148.89 °C
500 °F260 °C

Real-world reference

Water freezes at 32 °F. Room temperature is around 68–72 °F. A hot summer day is around 90 °F.

Frequently asked questions

What is 0 degrees Fahrenheit in degrees Celsius?
0 °F equals -17.7778 °C.
What is 100 degrees Fahrenheit in degrees Celsius?
100 °F equals 37.7778 °C.
How do I convert degrees Fahrenheit to degrees Celsius?
Use the formula: °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9.
What does a normal body temperature look like in degrees Celsius?
A healthy human body temperature is about 37 °C, 98.6 °F, or 310.15 K.
At what degree Fahrenheit does water freeze?
Water freezes at 32 °F = 0 °C.
At what degree Fahrenheit does water boil at 1 atm?
Water boils at 212 °F = 100 °C.
Can the result be negative?
Yes. Temperature scales other than Kelvin can go below zero. Liquid nitrogen, for example, sits around −196 °C (−320 °F).
Are these results exact?
Conversion formulas are mathematically exact; results are stored as IEEE 754 doubles and rounded for display. The internal calculation matches the formula to within 1 part in 10^15.

About the degree Fahrenheit and the degree Celsius

The degree Fahrenheit

The degree Fahrenheit (°F) is the customary temperature scale in the United States, defined since 1968 such that water freezes at exactly 32 °F and boils at exactly 212 °F at standard pressure — giving 180 Fahrenheit degrees over a range of 100 Celsius degrees. The scale was proposed in 1724 by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit, who calibrated zero against a brine ice bath. To convert °F to °C, subtract 32 then multiply by 5/9.

The degree Celsius

The degree Celsius (°C) is the SI-derived unit of temperature on a scale where 0 °C is the freezing point of water at standard pressure and 100 °C is the boiling point. Defined in 1742 by Anders Celsius (originally with the scale inverted) and refined repeatedly since, it shares its size of degree with the Kelvin: a change of 1 °C is identical to a change of 1 K. It is the everyday temperature unit almost everywhere outside the United States.

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