Hull Speed Calculator – Find Your Boat’s Maximum Speed

⛵ Hull Speed Calculator

Calculate the theoretical maximum speed of your displacement hull boat using waterline length

Quick Presets
📏 Enter Boat Details
📊 Hull Speed Results
🚢 Hull Type Speed Comparison
1.34
Monohull Max SLR
1.5
Catamaran SLR
2.0+
Semi-Disp SLR
3.0+
Planing Hull SLR
1.0
Typical Cruise SLR
1.2
Brisk Sailing SLR
0.85
Passage Avg SLR
1.8
Trawler Power SLR
📋 Hull Speed Reference Table
LWL (ft) LWL (m) Hull Speed (kts) Hull Speed (mph) Hull Speed (km/h) Typical Use
15 ft4.57 m5.19 kts5.97 mph9.61 km/hSmall Dinghy
20 ft6.10 m5.99 kts6.89 mph11.09 km/hDay Sailer
25 ft7.62 m6.70 kts7.71 mph12.41 km/hWeekender
30 ft9.14 m7.34 kts8.45 mph13.60 km/hCoastal Cruiser
35 ft10.67 m7.93 kts9.13 mph14.69 km/hBluewater Cruiser
40 ft12.19 m8.47 kts9.74 mph15.68 km/hOffshore Sailer
45 ft13.72 m8.98 kts10.34 mph16.64 km/hPerformance Cruiser
50 ft15.24 m9.47 kts10.90 mph17.55 km/hLong Range Cruiser
60 ft18.29 m10.37 kts11.93 mph19.21 km/hLiveaboard / Ketch
70 ft21.34 m11.21 kts12.90 mph20.76 km/hSuperyacht / Charter
🛳 Vessel Type Specifications
Vessel Type Typical LWL Hull Mode Max SLR Typical Hull Speed Notes
Dinghy / Skiff10–18 ftDisplacement / Planing1.34–3.04.2–6.4 ktsCan plane in strong wind
Day Sailer18–25 ftDisplacement1.345.7–6.7 ktsKeelboat, light displacement
Coastal Cruiser25–35 ftDisplacement1.346.7–7.9 ktsModerate to heavy displacement
Bluewater Cruiser35–45 ftDisplacement1.347.9–9.0 ktsHeavy, stiff hull for offshore
Catamaran25–50 ftDisplacement1.4–1.67.5–11 ktsLighter displacement per hull
Trawler / Passagemaker30–60 ftSemi-Displacement1.5–1.88–12 ktsFuel-efficient at displacement
Power Cruiser20–40 ftSemi-Disp / Planing2.0–3.0+15–30+ ktsHigh power-to-weight ratio
Canoe / Kayak12–18 ftDisplacement1.0–1.23.4–5.1 ktsNarrow beam, low resistance
📊 Speed-Length Ratio Guide
SLR Value Hull Mode Description Typical Vessel Fuel Efficiency
0.8 – 1.0DisplacementEconomy / Motoring speedTrawlers, cruisers under powerVery High
1.0 – 1.2DisplacementComfortable passage speedSailboats, trawlersHigh
1.2 – 1.34DisplacementHull speed approachRacing sailboats, light cruisersModerate
1.34Displacement MaxTheoretical hull speed limitAll displacement hullsLow — max effort
1.34 – 2.0Semi-DisplacementBow wave partially climbedSemi-disp powerboatsPoor
2.0 – 3.0Semi-DisplacementTransitioning to planingFast powerboats, RIBsVery Poor
3.0+PlaningHull rises above bow waveSpeedboats, sportfishersN/A — planing physics
💡 Key Formula Note: Hull speed (kts) = 1.34 × √LWL(ft). Always use waterline length, not overall length. LOA is typically 10–20% longer than LWL on most sailboats. Using LOA will overestimate your hull speed.
💡 Speed-Length Ratio Tips: At SLR = 1.0 your boat uses roughly 50% less power than at SLR = 1.34. Catamarans and trimarans can exceed 1.34 without the same wave drag penalty due to their narrow, lighter hulls. Semi-displacement hulls benefit from high power-to-weight ratios.

Hull speed, or displacement speed, is the moment when the wave of the bow has wavelength equal to the length of the waterline of the ship. During the boat boost from stop, that wave stretches and her height grows together with it Delokiĝa hull move through the water self, rather than planing hull that slips above the surface.

Here is the formula for this theoretical speed: take 1.34 and multiply it by the square root of the waterline length in feet. Boat with 25 feet waterline, or actually, 18-foot waterline, reach around 5.5 knots. The calculation bases on wavelength of peak to peak.

What Is Hull Speed?

Beneteau First 30, with 8.15 metres waterline, reach hull speed close to 7 knots. Swan 54 with longer waterline surpass that.

The basic formula is 1.34 times the square root of the waterline length, but here is the key, you can corect it. According to the form of the hull, the multiplier can be 1.2 or even 1.42. Consider boat with 49 feet waterline.

According to whether it is thick or slim, heavy or pointy, the speed ranges from around 8.4 until almost 10 knots.

Hull speed is not strict bar, not as the speed of light. It simply shows that most of boats can not always surpass that threshold. The power for go more quickly cost astronomical amounts of energy.

When displacement hull tries to boost, it starts to dig in. That generates big bow wave and more drag, what requires more force only to stay hear.

Most displacement monohulls run into troubles in speed-to-length ratio of 1.1 until 1.2. At that level, almost half of the wind energy goes only to create waves. Heavier boats submerge more deeply and move more water aside.

Both bow and stern waves play when the hull cut through them. The more quickly, the bigger and longer those waves become. Ultimately, bow and stern waves sync and resistance bursts.

Hull speed you can consider as the maximum spot where the ship boosts without big power losses. Here the hull slip with minimal drag, commonly the most comfortable haste without excessive noise, unless it already plans. Modern displacement hulls can surpass hull speed without planning, even without extra power.

Old designs? Here hull speed is the ceiling, unless the boat becomes plane. If it is planing hull, it simply rises on the bow wave and slipaway.

Hull Speed Calculator – Find Your Boat’s Maximum Speed

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