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Cups to Grams: Why the Conversion Depends on the Ingredient

Why 1 cup of flour weighs differently from 1 cup of sugar, and what measurement caveats you should know before baking.

Verified against King Arthur Baking Ingredient Weight Chart on 24 Feb 2026 Updated 24 February 2026 3 min read
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Summary

A cup measures volume, not weight. Because different ingredients pack differently and have different densities, 1 cup of all-purpose flour weighs about 120 g, but 1 cup of honey weighs 336 g — nearly three times as much.

This calculator converts between volume measurements (cups, tablespoons, teaspoons, ml, fl oz) and weight measurements (grams, ounces, kg, lb) using ingredient-specific density values sourced from King Arthur Baking’s authoritative weight chart, the gold standard in US professional baking.

How it works

Why cups-to-grams varies by ingredient

Every ingredient has a different bulk density — how tightly its particles pack into a given volume. There are two reasons a cup of flour and a cup of sugar weigh differently:

  1. Particle shape and size: Fine powders (icing sugar, cornstarch) pack more tightly than coarse grains (rolled oats, couscous). Irregular shapes (chopped nuts, rice) leave more air gaps.

  2. Packing method: Scooping compacts an ingredient; spooning-and-levelling keeps it loose. A scooped cup of flour can weigh 25–30% more than a spooned cup.

The conversion formula

grams = volume_in_cups × density

Where

volume_in_cups= The input amount converted to cups
density= Grams per cup for the selected ingredient (from the ingredient database)

For non-cup volume inputs, we first convert to cups using exact US measurement relationships:

cups = amount × unit_factor

Where

amount= The input number
unit_factor= Cups per unit: tsp = 1/48, tbsp = 1/16, fl oz = 1/8, ml = 1/236.588

Volume unit relationships

UnitCupsmL
1 cup1236.6
1 fl oz1/829.6
1 tbsp1/1614.8
1 tsp1/484.9
1 mL1/236.61

These are US customary measurements. UK/Australian tablespoons (15 mL vs US 14.8 mL) and cups (250 mL vs US 236.6 mL) differ slightly; this calculator uses US standard measurements.

Worked example

1 cup all-purpose flour to grams

1

Select ingredient

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2

Input

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3

Convert to cups

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4

Apply density

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5

Convert to oz

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Result

3 tablespoons of honey to grams

1

Select ingredient

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2

Input

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3

Convert to cups

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4

Apply density

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5

Convert to oz

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Result

Verification table

Values verified against King Arthur Baking weight chart (accessed 2026-02-24):

IngredientVolumeGramsSource
All-purpose flour1 cup120 gKing Arthur Baking
Bread flour1 cup120 gKing Arthur Baking
Whole wheat flour1 cup113 gKing Arthur Baking
Almond flour1 cup96 gKing Arthur Baking
Coconut flour1 cup128 gKing Arthur Baking
Oat flour1 cup92 gKing Arthur Baking
Granulated white sugar1 cup198 gKing Arthur Baking
Brown sugar (packed)1 cup213 gKing Arthur Baking
Powdered sugar (unsifted)1 cup113 gKing Arthur Baking
Butter½ cup113 gKing Arthur Baking
Honey1 tbsp21 gKing Arthur Baking
Milk (whole)1 cup227 gKing Arthur Baking
Heavy cream1 cup227 gKing Arthur Baking
Rolled oats1 cup89 gKing Arthur Baking
Cocoa powder (unsweetened)½ cup42 gKing Arthur Baking

Measurement caveats

Flour: spoon-and-level vs scoop-and-sweep

This is the most important caveat in all of baking measurement:

  • Spoon-and-level (King Arthur standard): Spoon flour into the cup, then level off. Result: ~120 g per cup.
  • Scoop-and-sweep: Drag the measuring cup through the flour bag and level. Result: 140–160 g per cup — 17–33% more.

This calculator uses the spoon-and-level standard, matching King Arthur Baking. If your recipe is from a blog that scoops (many are), add ~10–15% to the gram value shown.

Brown sugar: packed vs unpacked

Standard recipes assume packed brown sugar. Press sugar firmly into the cup until it holds its shape when inverted.

  • Packed: ~213 g per cup (King Arthur)
  • Unpacked: ~100–120 g per cup

Powdered/icing sugar: sifted vs unsifted

  • Unsifted (standard): ~113 g per cup
  • Sifted: ~85–95 g per cup

Sift powdered sugar only if the recipe explicitly calls for it; most don’t.

Liquids: US vs metric cup

This calculator uses the US cup (236.6 mL). UK and Australian cups are 250 mL — about 5.6% larger. For liquids where density ≈ 1 g/mL, this means:

  • 1 US cup water = 237 g
  • 1 Australian/UK cup water = 250 g

Data sources and trust model

Every density value in this calculator comes from King Arthur Baking’s ingredient weight chart — the most comprehensive, publicly available, and professionally maintained baking weight reference in the US.

King Arthur Baking is a professional baking company with over 200 years of experience. Their weight chart is used by professional and home bakers as the industry standard.

If a value is wrong, it is because our source was wrong. We display the source for every ingredient so you can verify independently. The King Arthur weight chart is at: https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/learn/ingredient-weight-chart

Last verified: 2026-02-24.

Assumptions and limitations

  • All values are for the US customary cup (236.6 mL / 8 fl oz)
  • Flour values use the spoon-and-level method
  • Brown sugar values assume packed
  • Powdered sugar values are unsifted
  • Honey, maple syrup, and other syrups at room temperature (viscosity affects pouring but not density)
  • Values are averages — brand variation, humidity, and altitude can cause minor differences (typically ±2–5%)
  • Cooked/prepared ingredient weights (e.g., cooked rice) differ from raw; this calculator shows raw/dry weights unless noted

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USDA FoodData Centralaccessed 24 Feb 2026
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