how fast is earth spinning
Earth is spinning once per day, which works out to about 1,670 km/h (1,040 mph) at the equator and slower speeds as you move toward the poles, reaching essentially zero at the poles themselves.
Quick Scoop: How fast is Earth spinning?
- At the equator , Earth’s surface moves at roughly 1,670 km/h (about 1,040 mph).
- At mid‑latitudes (like much of Europe or the U.S.), your speed is lower because the “circle” you trace each day is smaller.
- At the poles , you’re basically just turning in place once per day, so your linear speed from rotation is close to zero.
Why it doesn’t feel like we’re moving
Even though these speeds sound huge, everything around you (air, oceans, buildings, your body) is moving with Earth at nearly the same constant speed. There’s no sudden acceleration or jolts, so you don’t feel the motion—similar to how you don’t feel steady motion in a smooth airplane cruising at high speed.
A tiny bit of math flavor
Earth’s equatorial circumference is about 40,075 km, and it completes one rotation in about 23.93 hours (a sidereal day), which gives about 1,675 km/h at the equator—rounded to the common figures above. To get the speed at your latitude, you multiply that equatorial speed by the cosine of your latitude, which is why speeds fall toward the poles.
Fun extra: You’d weigh slightly more if it stopped
Earth’s spin provides a small outward (centrifugal) effect that slightly reduces your weight, most strongly at the equator. If Earth suddenly stopped spinning (ignoring the huge disasters that would cause), you’d weigh about 0.3% more at the equator than you do now.
Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.