Grams to Cups Converter
Type in grams, pick your ingredient, and get an accurate cup measurement in a blink.
๐ How it works & FAQTurn a kitchen scale reading into cups
Recipes written in grams are precise, but sometimes you only have measuring cups โ or you scaled a batch on a scale and now need to know how many cups you actually poured. This converter flips the math: enter the grams and choose your ingredient, and it divides by that ingredient's grams-per-cup density to give you a cup measurement instantly.
Why the ingredient matters
A cup is a measure of volume, but grams measure weight, so the conversion changes with every ingredient. A cup of all-purpose flour weighs about 125 g, while a cup of granulated sugar weighs 200 g and a cup of butter 227 g. Feathery cocoa and dense honey sit at opposite ends. Picking the right ingredient from the dropdown is what keeps the answer honest โ using flour's density for sugar would be off by more than half.
How to use it
- Type the weight in grams into the Grams box.
- Choose your ingredient from the dropdown (each shows its grams-per-cup).
- Read the cup result โ it updates the moment you type.
- Use the friendly fraction line (like "1 1/2 cups") to fill real measuring cups, or the tablespoon line for small amounts.
Everything runs in your browser โ nothing you type is uploaded or saved anywhere.
FAQ
- How many cups is 125 grams of flour?
- About 1 cup. All-purpose flour is roughly 125 g per cup, so 125 g divides out to exactly 1 cup.
- Why don't my grams-to-cups and cups-to-grams answers match exactly?
- They use the same density map, so they should round-trip closely. Tiny gaps come from rounding to friendly fractions and from real-world packing โ sifted vs. scooped flour can vary by 10 to 20 percent.
- Are these conversions exact?
- They're solid estimates based on standard US cup densities. Humidity, how tightly you pack an ingredient, and brand differences all shift the weight, so treat the results as a close guide rather than a lab measurement.
- My ingredient isn't listed โ what do I do?
- Pick the closest match by texture and density. Fine powders behave like flour or cocoa, granules like sugar, and pourable liquids like milk or water at about 240 g per cup.