Mass Converter
Mass determines everything from drug dosage to freight shipping costs, yet the world uses at least three parallel systems: the SI kilogram family, the avoirdupois pound/ounce system dominant in the US, and the troy system still used for precious metals. A kilogram of gold contains 32.15 troy ounces but only 2.205 avoirdupois pounds — a gap that matters enormously in commodity trading. This converter bridges all three systems across 16 units, from the microgram scale of pharmaceutical ingredients to the metric tonne scale of bulk materials.
Mass Conversion Guide
Understanding Mass Measurements
The kilogram is the SI base unit of mass, redefined in 2019 by fixing the Planck constant at exactly 6.626 070 15 × 10⁻³⁴ J·s. The gram (1/1000 kg), milligram, and tonne (1000 kg) follow SI prefix convention. The avoirdupois pound — used for everyday commerce in the US — is defined as exactly 453.592 37 g. The troy pound (for precious metals) is 373.241 72 g, making a troy ounce (31.103 g) heavier than an avoirdupois ounce (28.350 g) by about 10%.
All conversions in this category are computed relative to a single base unit — Kilogram — using factors sourced from NIST Special Publication 811 and the BIPM SI Brochure. Anchoring every conversion to one reference unit guarantees mathematical consistency: converting from A → B → C always yields the same result as converting directly from A → C.
Common Mass Units
Among the 10 supported units, the most frequently used include Kilogram, Gram, Milligram, Microgram, Metric Ton. These appear across household tasks, professional environments, and academic study.
Many units carry aliases and regional abbreviations that appear in product specs, recipes, and technical documents. We index common synonyms so searches for alternate spellings still reach the right converter — for example, Kilogram (kg, also written as kilograms or kilo), or Gram (g, also written as grams or gramme), or Milligram (mg, also written as milligrams or milligramme).
How to Convert Mass Accurately
All mass conversions within the SI family are purely multiplicative — you multiply the source value by a fixed conversion factor derived from the ratio of the two unit definitions. Imperial-to-metric conversions use the exact defined equivalences (e.g., 1 inch = 25.4 mm exactly) rather than approximations.
When precision matters — machining tolerances, pharmaceutical compounding, scientific reporting — avoid intermediate rounding. Each converter page shows the full unrounded factor so you can carry maximum precision through multi-step calculations and only round the final result.
Real-World Applications of Mass Units
In daily practice, choosing the right mass unit saves time and prevents costly errors. Commercial shipping, construction, and scientific research all depend on correct unit handling to maintain safety, compliance, and reproducibility across borders and disciplines.
Consumer products, regulations, and international standards often specify values in different unit systems — a drug dosage in micrograms, a fuel efficiency in L/100 km, a tyre pressure in PSI. Each domain has a dominant unit, and cross-domain work requires reliable conversion. This converter is built for exactly those situations: results traceable to internationally defined constants, displayed with full precision.
Available Mass Units
Popular Mass Converters
Start with these commonly useful converter pages, then use each page's related links for reverse and nearby conversions.
All Mass Converters
Each link opens a dedicated converter page with a formula, examples, table, manual steps, FAQ, and related converters.
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Mass Converter FAQ
How many mass units are supported?
This category supports 10 units: Kilogram, Gram, Milligram, Microgram, Metric Ton, Pound, Ounce, Stone, US Ton, Imperial Ton.
How do I convert mass units?
Choose a source and target unit, enter a value, and multiply through the kg base-unit factors shown on the dedicated converter page.
Which mass conversion should I start with?
Kilogram to Gram is a useful starting point, and the related links on that page connect to reverse and nearby conversions.
Are mass conversions available without JavaScript?
Yes. Category descriptions, unit lists, converter links, FAQs, and structured data are rendered in the initial HTML source.
Are mass converter URLs canonical?
Yes. Each converter page uses one trailing-slash canonical URL and the sitemap lists those same canonical URLs.