Brake Distance Formula

Braking distance is how far a vehicle travels while decelerating to a stop, set by speed and tire grip.

Braking Distance = v² ÷ (2 × μ × g)

Where

v Speed at the start of braking
μ (mu) Tire-to-road friction coefficient (about 0.7 dry, 0.4 wet)
g Gravity, 9.81 m/s² (32.2 ft/s²)

Worked example

At 27 m/s (about 60 mph) on dry asphalt: 27² ÷ (2 × 0.7 × 9.81) = 729 ÷ 13.7, about 53 m of braking.

Total stopping distance adds reaction distance — speed multiplied by reaction time (around 1.5 s) — before braking even begins.

Use the Brake Distance calculator to include reaction distance.

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