Reynolds Number Calculator
Calculate Reynolds number from velocity or flow rate, geometry, density, and viscosity, then classify the flow behavior.
Calculator is for informational purposes only. Terms and Conditions
Choose calculation method
Select the known flow input, viscosity type, and geometry.
Enter the known values
Only inputs needed for the selected method are active. Unit changes preserve the same physical value.
Visual Check
See how the result relates to flow behavior without overlapping labels or unreadable callouts.
Solution
Live result, quick checks, warnings, and full solution steps.
Quick checks
- Flow regime—
Show solution steps See conversions, equations, assumptions, and flow-regime checks
- Enter values to see the full calculation steps and checks.
Source, Standards, and Assumptions
Calculation basis, constants, assumptions, and limitations.
Reynolds number is calculated using the standard dimensionless fluid mechanics relationship.
- Assumptions will appear after a valid calculation.
On this page
Calculator Guide
How to Use the Reynolds Number Calculator
The Reynolds Number Calculator above calculates the dimensionless Reynolds number, \(Re\), and helps you judge whether internal pipe or duct flow is likely laminar, transitional, or turbulent. Enter the velocity or flow rate, choose the correct geometry, select dynamic or kinematic viscosity, and use the result as a fast fluid-flow check.
Reynolds number compares inertial effects to viscous effects. A high value usually means inertia dominates and turbulent behavior is more likely; a low value usually means viscosity dominates and laminar behavior is more likely. If you searched for a “Reynold’s Number Calculator,” the correct engineering term is Reynolds number, named after Osborne Reynolds.
Quick Answer
For internal pipe flow, calculate Reynolds number with \(Re=\rho V D_h/\mu\) when density and dynamic viscosity are known, or \(Re=V D_h/\nu\) when kinematic viscosity is known. As a common pipe-flow guide, \(Re<2300\) is usually laminar, \(2300\) to \(4000\) is transitional, and \(Re>4000\) is usually turbulent.
When not to rely on a simplified result
Do not use Reynolds number alone as final proof of a pipe, pump, heat exchanger, aerodynamic, or CFD design. Surface roughness, inlet disturbances, compressibility, non-Newtonian fluids, temperature-dependent viscosity, and detailed pressure-loss calculations may also matter.
Inputs and Outputs Used by the Calculator
The calculator uses the flow speed, a characteristic length, and viscosity information to calculate a dimensionless Reynolds number. Depending on the selected mode, velocity may be entered directly or calculated from volumetric flow rate and cross-sectional area.
| Type | Value | What It Means | Common Units |
|---|---|---|---|
| Input | Velocity, \(V\) | Average flow velocity through the pipe, duct, or section. If flow rate is known, use \(V=Q/A\). | m/s, ft/s |
| Input | Hydraulic diameter, \(D_h\) | Characteristic length used for internal flow. For a circular pipe, this is the inside diameter. | m, mm, in, ft |
| Input | Density, \(\rho\) | Fluid mass per unit volume, required when using dynamic viscosity. | kg/m³, lb/ft³ |
| Input | Dynamic viscosity, \(\mu\) | Fluid resistance to shear, used in \(Re=\rho V D_h/\mu\). | Pa·s, cP |
| Input | Kinematic viscosity, \(\nu\) | Dynamic viscosity divided by density, used in \(Re=V D_h/\nu\). | m²/s, cSt |
| Output | Reynolds number, \(Re\) | A dimensionless flow parameter used to interpret laminar, transitional, or turbulent behavior. | No units |
Reynolds Number Formula
The main Reynolds number formula for internal pipe and duct flow compares the product of density, velocity, and hydraulic diameter against dynamic viscosity. The same relationship can be written with kinematic viscosity when \(\nu=\mu/\rho\).
Dynamic Viscosity Form
Use this form when you know fluid density and dynamic viscosity.
Kinematic Viscosity Form
Use this form when the fluid property table gives kinematic viscosity directly.
Flow Rate to Velocity
When you know volumetric flow rate, calculate average velocity from flow rate \(Q\) divided by flow area \(A\), then use the Reynolds number equation.
Hydraulic Diameter for Non-Circular Flow
For non-circular sections, hydraulic diameter uses cross-sectional flow area \(A\) and wetted perimeter \(P\).
Rectangular Duct Hydraulic Diameter
For a fully filled rectangular duct, \(w\) is width and \(h\) is height.
Circular Pipe Flow Rate Form
For circular pipe flow with dynamic viscosity, this is the same as using \(V=Q/A\) and \(A=\pi D^2/4\).
Circular Pipe Flow Rate with Kinematic Viscosity
Use this version when flow rate, pipe diameter, and kinematic viscosity are known.
What the Variables Mean
Each Reynolds number variable must represent the same physical flow section. The most common mistakes are using pipe radius instead of inside diameter, using outside diameter instead of inside diameter, or mixing dynamic and kinematic viscosity.
\(Re\)
Reynolds number. It is dimensionless, so the final answer does not have units.
\(\rho\)
Fluid density. Use this only with the dynamic viscosity formula.
\(V\)
Average velocity. For pipe flow, use average velocity through the cross-section, not maximum centerline velocity.
\(D_h\)
Hydraulic diameter or characteristic length. For circular pipe flow, \(D_h\) equals inside diameter.
\(\mu\)
Dynamic viscosity. Common units include Pa·s and cP.
\(\nu\)
Kinematic viscosity. Common units include m²/s and cSt.
\(Q\)
Volumetric flow rate. Use this when the problem gives discharge instead of velocity.
\(A\) and \(P\)
\(A\) is cross-sectional flow area. \(P\) is wetted perimeter for hydraulic diameter.
How to Use the Calculator
Start by choosing the input method that matches what you actually know. If you know velocity, use velocity mode. If you know GPM, L/min, CFM, or another flow rate, use flow-rate mode so the calculator can determine velocity from area.
| What You Know | Use This Mode | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Velocity, density, dynamic viscosity | Velocity + Dynamic Viscosity | Uses \(Re=\rho V D_h/\mu\). |
| Velocity and kinematic viscosity | Velocity + Kinematic Viscosity | Uses \(Re=V D_h/\nu\). |
| Flow rate and pipe diameter | Flow Rate + Circular Pipe | Calculates area and velocity before solving \(Re\). |
| Rectangular duct width and height | Rectangular Duct Geometry | Calculates \(D_h=2wh/(w+h)\). |
| Known hydraulic diameter | Custom Hydraulic Diameter | Uses your entered characteristic length directly. |
Choose velocity or flow rate
Use direct velocity when it is known. Use flow rate when the problem gives discharge, such as GPM or L/min, and the pipe or duct size is known.
Select the geometry
Use circular pipe for inside diameter, rectangular duct for width and height, or custom hydraulic diameter if you already know \(D_h\).
Choose viscosity type
Select dynamic viscosity when you know \(\rho\) and \(\mu\). Select kinematic viscosity when you know \(\nu\).
Read the flow behavior
Use the Reynolds number and the flow-regime note as a quick screening result, then check the limitations for your application.
How to Interpret Reynolds Number Results
For common internal pipe or duct flow, Reynolds number is often interpreted using three practical ranges: laminar, transitional, and turbulent. These ranges are useful for screening, but the exact transition can shift with roughness, disturbances, entrance conditions, and geometry.
| Reynolds Number | Flow Behavior | Practical Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| \(Re<2300\) | Laminar | Smooth, orderly layers of flow; viscous effects are dominant. |
| \(2300\le Re\le4000\) | Transitional | Flow may switch between laminar and turbulent behavior; use caution with correlations. |
| \(Re>4000\) | Turbulent | Chaotic mixing and stronger inertial effects; pressure-loss calculations often require a friction factor. |
External-flow warning
Do not apply the pipe-flow values \(2300\) and \(4000\) as strict transition limits for external flow over plates, cylinders, airfoils, vehicles, or buildings. External-flow transition depends on surface roughness, shape, disturbances, and the selected characteristic length.
What to do with the result
Use \(Re\) to choose the right flow-regime assumption before pressure loss, heat transfer, or CFD setup.
What changes the result most?
Velocity and diameter increase Reynolds number directly. Higher viscosity decreases Reynolds number directly.
Sanity check
Water moving at about 1 m/s in a 50 mm pipe should produce a turbulent Reynolds number, not a small laminar value.
Input Checklist Before You Trust the Answer
Reynolds number is simple, but the result is very sensitive to unit and input selection. Use this checklist before using the value in a larger calculation.
Use inside diameter
For circular pipe flow, enter the inside diameter. Do not use radius or outside diameter unless that is truly the flow diameter.
Use average velocity
Velocity should represent the average cross-sectional flow speed. If you know flow rate, calculate \(V=Q/A\).
Match viscosity type
Do not enter kinematic viscosity in a dynamic viscosity field or dynamic viscosity in a kinematic viscosity field.
Check the fluid temperature
Viscosity can change significantly with temperature, especially for liquids such as water, oils, and glycerin.
Reynolds Number Worked Example
This example uses water flowing through a circular pipe, which is one of the most common Reynolds number calculator use cases.
Formula
Substitution
Final answer
\(Re\approx49{,}810\), which is dimensionless. Because this is greater than 4000, the flow is typically turbulent for internal circular pipe flow.
Reverse check
Rearranging the formula gives \(\mu=\rho V D_h/Re\). Substituting the result gives \(\mu=(998.2)(1.0)(0.05)/49{,}810.4\approx0.001002\ \text{Pa}\cdot\text{s}\), which matches the original viscosity.
Visual Explanation of Reynolds Number
The diagram below shows the relationship without placing dark backgrounds behind text. Density, velocity, and hydraulic diameter increase Reynolds number, while viscosity decreases it.
This visual shows the basic direction of each variable: \(\rho\), \(V\), and \(D_h\) raise Reynolds number, while viscosity lowers it.
Reference Checks and Source Notes
For common internal pipe flow, the practical screening thresholds are often stated as laminar below about 2300, transitional from about 2300 to 4000, and turbulent above about 4000. Treat these as useful engineering guideposts, not exact universal boundaries.
Source note
For a concise explanation of pipe-flow transition behavior and why the exact transition depends on disturbances, see Princeton’s discussion of transition and turbulence in pipe flow.
Common reference check
Water near 20°C in a 50 mm pipe at 1 m/s gives \(Re\approx50{,}000\), which is clearly turbulent for internal pipe flow.
Small-tube check
Water near 20°C in a 1 mm tube at 0.1 m/s gives \(Re\approx100\), which is typically laminar.
Design Notes and Practical Ranges
Reynolds number is usually a first screening step, not the final design calculation. Once you know the flow regime, the next step may be a pressure drop, friction factor, pump sizing, heat transfer, or CFD model setup check.
Laminar range
Laminar assumptions are often simpler, but only use laminar correlations when the Reynolds number and physical conditions support them.
Transitional range
The transitional range is uncertain. Small disturbances, pipe roughness, and entrance conditions can change behavior.
Turbulent range
Turbulent flow often requires friction factor and roughness checks before estimating pressure loss.
Units and Conversions
Reynolds number has no units, but the inputs must be converted consistently before the formula is applied. If you mix SI and U.S. customary units without conversion, the result can be wrong even though the formula is correct.
Important unit traps
Remember that \(1\ \text{cP}=0.001\ \text{Pa}\cdot\text{s}\), \(1\ \text{cSt}=10^{-6}\ \text{m}^2/\text{s}\), and \(1\ \text{GPM}\approx0.00006309\ \text{m}^3/\text{s}\). A viscosity unit mistake can change Reynolds number by a factor of 1000.
Most common viscosity mistake
Water near room temperature is about \(1\ \text{cP}\), not \(0.001\ \text{cP}\). It is also about \(0.001\ \text{Pa}\cdot\text{s}\). Mixing those two unit systems is one of the easiest ways to get a wrong Reynolds number.
Dynamic viscosity mode
Use density and dynamic viscosity together: \(\rho\) and \(\mu\).
Kinematic viscosity mode
Use kinematic viscosity directly: \(\nu=\mu/\rho\).
Dynamic Viscosity vs Kinematic Viscosity
Dynamic viscosity and kinematic viscosity are related, but they are not interchangeable inputs. Dynamic viscosity measures resistance to shear. Kinematic viscosity adjusts that resistance by density.
Use dynamic viscosity when
- You know density and \(\mu\).
- Your data sheet gives viscosity in Pa·s or cP.
- You want to use \(Re=\rho V D_h/\mu\).
Use kinematic viscosity when
- Your fluid table gives \(\nu\) directly.
- Your value is in m²/s or cSt.
- You want to use \(Re=V D_h/\nu\).
Hydraulic diameter vs hydraulic radius
Hydraulic diameter is \(D_h=4A/P\), while hydraulic radius is \(R_h=A/P\). Therefore, \(D_h=4R_h\). This matters because Reynolds number commonly uses hydraulic diameter, not hydraulic radius.
Common Reynolds Number Mistakes
Most incorrect Reynolds number results come from using the wrong length, wrong viscosity type, or wrong unit conversion. These errors can make a laminar flow look turbulent or a turbulent flow look laminar.
Do
- Use inside diameter for circular pipe flow.
- Use hydraulic diameter for non-circular ducts.
- Use average velocity, or calculate it from \(Q/A\).
- Check whether viscosity is dynamic or kinematic.
Don’t
- Do not enter radius when the formula needs diameter.
- Do not enter cP as if it were Pa·s.
- Do not use pipe thresholds as strict external-flow rules.
- Do not ignore temperature effects on viscosity.
Troubleshooting Unrealistic Reynolds Number Results
If your Reynolds number seems unrealistic, check units before changing the physics. A result that is 10, 100, or 1000 times off is often caused by a unit scale error rather than an unusual flow condition.
Result is too high
Check whether viscosity was entered too low, diameter was too large, or flow rate was used without the correct area conversion.
Result is too low
Check whether velocity is too small, diameter is entered in the wrong unit, or viscosity was entered too high.
Transitional result
Do not force the flow into a clean laminar or turbulent category. Transitional flow is sensitive to disturbances.
External-flow result
Use Reynolds number as a comparison parameter, but do not apply pipe-flow thresholds as strict transition limits.
Assumptions and Limitations
This calculator is best used for educational and preliminary engineering checks. It assumes the selected velocity, characteristic length, and viscosity represent the flow condition accurately.
Newtonian fluid assumption
The standard formula assumes viscosity behaves consistently for the flow condition. Non-Newtonian fluids may require additional analysis.
Internal-flow thresholds
The common 2300 and 4000 thresholds are mainly internal pipe and duct flow guidelines, not universal laws.
Preliminary screening
For final design, confirm friction factors, pressure loss, pump requirements, heat transfer correlations, and applicable standards as needed.
Key Reynolds Number Terms
These terms help connect the calculator inputs, formulas, and flow-regime result.
Laminar flow
Smooth, layered flow where viscous forces are strong relative to inertial forces.
Turbulent flow
Irregular, mixing-dominated flow where inertial effects are strong relative to viscous effects.
Hydraulic diameter
A characteristic length used for non-circular sections, commonly based on flow area and wetted perimeter.
Dynamic viscosity
A measure of a fluid’s resistance to shearing motion, commonly written as \(\mu\).
Kinematic viscosity
Dynamic viscosity divided by density, commonly written as \(\nu\).
Characteristic length
The representative length scale used in the Reynolds number calculation.
FAQ
What is Reynolds number?
Reynolds number is a dimensionless value that compares inertial forces to viscous forces in a fluid flow. It is commonly used to estimate whether internal pipe or duct flow is laminar, transitional, or turbulent.
What Reynolds number is laminar or turbulent?
For common internal pipe and duct flow, flow is typically treated as laminar below \(Re=2300\), transitional from about \(2300\) to \(4000\), and turbulent above \(4000\). These thresholds are practical guidelines, not universal limits for every geometry or external-flow problem.
Do I use dynamic viscosity or kinematic viscosity?
Use dynamic viscosity when you also know fluid density and want to calculate \(Re=\rho V D_h/\mu\). Use kinematic viscosity when the viscosity value already equals dynamic viscosity divided by density, so the formula becomes \(Re=V D_h/\nu\).
Should I use pipe radius or diameter for Reynolds number?
For circular internal pipe flow, use the inside diameter, not the radius. For non-circular ducts or channels, use hydraulic diameter or an appropriate characteristic length.
How do I calculate Reynolds number from flow rate?
First calculate average velocity using \(V=Q/A\), where \(Q\) is volumetric flow rate and \(A\) is flow area. Then use \(Re=\rho V D_h/\mu\) or \(Re=V D_h/\nu\). For circular pipe flow, this can also be written as \(Re=4\rho Q/(\pi\mu D)\).
What is hydraulic diameter?
Hydraulic diameter is a characteristic length used for non-circular flow sections. It is calculated as \(D_h=4A/P\), where \(A\) is flow area and \(P\) is wetted perimeter.
Why is my Reynolds number so high?
A very high Reynolds number often comes from high velocity, large diameter, low viscosity, or a unit mistake. Common errors include entering centipoise as pascal-seconds, using outside diameter instead of inside diameter, or using flow rate without converting to average velocity.