How the braking distance calculator works
Enter your speed, your reaction time, and the road condition, and the tool estimates how far it takes to stop. Total stopping distance has two parts: the reaction distance you travel while you notice and respond to a hazard, and the braking distance once the brakes are applied. The tool adds them and shows the total in feet, car lengths, and meters.
Reaction distance and braking distance
Reaction distance is your speed times your reaction time, since the car keeps moving before you brake. A common assumption is around 1.5 seconds, but fatigue, distraction, and age increase it. Braking distance grows with the square of speed, which is why doubling your speed roughly quadruples the distance needed to stop.
Road conditions matter
The road surface sets how much grip the tires have. Dry asphalt gives strong braking, wet roads cut it substantially, and snow or ice can multiply stopping distances several times over. The tool uses representative friction values for each condition, but actual grip varies with tire quality, tread depth, and temperature.
Why this matters for following distance
Seeing stopping distance in car lengths makes the case for leaving space. At highway speed in poor conditions, a safe gap is much larger than many drivers leave. This calculator is a simplified physics model for awareness and education, not a guarantee; never use it to judge how close you can safely follow in real traffic.
Frequently asked questions
How far does it take to stop at 60 mph? Roughly 300 feet on dry road including reaction time, far more on wet or icy surfaces.
Why does speed matter so much? Braking distance rises with the square of speed, so small speed increases add a lot of distance.
What reaction time should I use? Around 1.5 seconds is typical; use more if tired or distracted.
