The formation of ice out of liquid water can be written down like this:
$$\ce{H2O (l) <=> H2O(s)}$$
We can calculate the change in standard Gibbs free energy (per mol substance) in the following way:
$$\Delta G^\circ = \Delta H^\circ - T \Delta S^\circ$$
If we do this at room temperature $(\pu{298 K}),$ we get: $\Delta G^\circ = \pu{546 J mol^-1}.$
So we can see that this process is very non-spontaneous, which is what you'd expect, you never see ice forming at room temperature. However if we calculate the equilibrium constant $K_\mathrm{eq}$ for this reaction we get:
$$K_\mathrm{eq} = \exp\left(-\frac{\Delta G^\circ}{RT}\right) \approx \mathrm e^{-0.22} \approx 0.80$$
It's obvious that this is wrong, because at room temperature we never see liquid water in equilibrium with a decent amount of ice. I just don't know what I did wrong, I have checked my units and calculations but can't seem to find what I did wrong.