Crosswind Calculator
Compute crosswind, headwind, and tailwind components for any runway and wind
Runway / Heading
Wind (from)
Wind Components
Crosswind
Head/Tailwind
Gust Components

Whether you’re planning a landing, takeoff, or a crosswind training session, knowing the exact wind components matters. This guide explains how to use the Crosswind Calculator, the math behind it, and shows worked examples so you can fly with confidence.
What the crosswind calculator gives you
- Crosswind component (magnitude and side: from left/right)
- headwind tailwind calculator component (magnitude and type)
- Optional gust components (max crosswind and head/tailwind with gust)
- Clear breakdown of headings, wind direction, relative angle, and formulas
- Multiple units: kt, mph, km/h, m/s
How wind components work (quick primer)
- Crosswind: side force acting across the runway/flight path.
- Headwind: wind opposing your motion (positive headwind component).
- Tailwind: wind pushing from behind (negative headwind component).
- Real winds rarely align perfectly; we decompose actual wind into these two components.
The crosswind component formula
- Define α as the wind-from angle relative to your magnetic heading (normalized to −180°…+180°).
- Crosswind component: X = V × sin(α)
- Sign: + means from right, − means from left
- headwind tailwind calculator: H = V × cos(α)
- Sign: + means headwind, − means tailwind
Where V is the wind speed in your chosen units.
- Sign: + means headwind, − means tailwind
How to use the Crosswind Calculator (step by step)
- Choose the runway (or use a custom heading)
- Select runway number 01–36. The calculator converts it to a magnetic heading (e.g., 27 → 270°, 09 → 90°, 36 → 360°).
- Optionally toggle “Use custom heading” to enter the exact magnetic heading if you need precision.
- Enter wind direction (from) and speed
- Direction is where the wind is coming from (0–360°; 0/360=N, 90=E, 180=S, 270=W).
- Enter the steady wind speed.
- Units: pick kt, mph, km/h, or m/s (calculator keeps units consistent in the output).
- Optional: add gusts
- Check “Include gust”
- Enter gust speed in the same units (e.g., 15G25 kt → set steady 15, gust 25).
- The calculator will add a “Gust Components” line with maxima.
- Click Calculate
- The results panel displays:
- Crosswind magnitude and side (from left/right)
- Headwind or tailwind magnitude and type
- Gust-based maxima (if provided)
- Breakdown: runway heading, wind-from direction, relative angle α, and formulas used
Worked examples
Example 1 — Typical quartering headwind
Inputs:
- Runway: 27 (270°)
- Wind: 220° at 15 kt
Angle:
- α = windDir − heading = 220 − 270 = −50°
Components:
- Crosswind = 15 × sin(−50°) ≈ −11.5 kt → 11.5 kt from left
- Head/Tail = 15 × cos(−50°) ≈ +9.6 kt → 9.6 kt headwind
- Interpretation: Left crosswind 11.5 kt and headwind 9.6 kt.
Example 2 — Quartering headwind from the right
Inputs:
- Runway: 09 (90°)
- Wind: 140° at 10 kt
Angle:
- α = 140 − 90 = +50°
Components:
- Crosswind = 10 × sin(50°) ≈ +7.7 kt → 7.7 kt from right
- Head/Tail = 10 × cos(50°) ≈ +6.4 kt → 6.4 kt headwind
Example 3 — Tailwind with small crosswind
Inputs:
- Runway: 18 (180°)
- Wind: 350° at 20 kt
Angle:
- Normalize α to within −180°…+180°:
- α = 350 − 180 = +170°
Components:
- Crosswind = 20 × sin(170°) ≈ +3.5 kt → 3.5 kt from right
- Head/Tail = 20 × cos(170°) ≈ −19.7 kt → 19.7 kt tailwind
- Note: Significant tailwind; most operations would avoid this.
Example 4 — Adding gusts
Inputs:
- Runway: 27 (270°)
- Wind: 220° at 15G25 kt
Angle:
- α = −50°
Steady components:
- Xsteady ≈ 11.5 kt from left; Hsteady ≈ 9.6 kt headwind
Gust components (replace V with gust = 25 kt):
- Xgust ≈ 25 × sin(50°) ≈ 19.2 kt; Hgust ≈ 25 × cos(50°) ≈ 16.1 kt
- Interpretation: Plan for crosswind up to ~19 kt and headwind up to ~16 kt.
Unit tips and quick conversions
- The calculator keeps whatever unit you choose for both input and output.
- Rule of thumb (for mental math):
- 30° off: sin ≈ 0.5, cos ≈ 0.87
- 45° off: sin ≈ 0.71, cos ≈ 0.71
- 60° off: sin ≈ 0.87, cos ≈ 0.5
- 90° off: sin = 1 (pure crosswind), cos = 0 (no head/tail)
Common pitfalls (and how to avoid them)
- Using wind “to” instead of “from”: Aviation winds are reported “from” (e.g., 220° means wind is coming from 220°).
- Forgetting magnetic vs. true: runway crosswind numbers are magnetic. Use magnetic wind (ATIS/METAR provides magnetic for practical operations at most fields).
- Not normalizing the angle: The aviation wind calculator normalizes α to −180°…+180° so signs (left/right, head/tail) are correct.
- Overlooking aircraft limits: Compare crosswind result to your aircraft’s max demonstrated crosswind and your personal minimums.
FAQ/ Frequently Asked Questions
How do you calculate the crosswind component?
How do you calculate headwind or tailwind?
What exactly is the angle α and how do I find it?
Do I enter the wind direction “from” or “to”?
Does the calculator use magnetic or true headings?
Which units are supported?
How do gusts affect the results?
What does “from left” or “from right” crosswind mean?
When is it pure crosswind or pure head/tailwind?
Can I enter a custom heading instead of a runway?
Any safety caveats?
You can explore Similar Calculator like this Land Contract Calculator.

