Butter mL to Grams Converter
Butter is a staple baking ingredient whose density is 0.96 g/mL. Converting butter from volume (mL) to weight (grams) helps you avoid packing errors and ensures perfect crusts and batters.
- Precise calculations
- Specific gravity support
- Baking & cooking ratios
The Formula
Butter mL to Grams Formula
The mathematical relationship between volume and weight is defined by the density equation: Grams = Milliliters × Density. Conversely, Milliliters = Grams ÷ Density.
This specific calculator defaults to a density of 0.96 g/mL, corresponding to Butter. In kitchen preparations, laboratory chemical compounding, or pharmaceutical formulations, this precise ratio bridges the gap between measuring cups (volume) and scales (mass).
Without factoring in the density coefficient of Butter, simple conversions will be inaccurate. For instance, dry ingredients contain tiny air spaces between grains, yielding a significantly lower weight than the equivalent liquid volume.
Volume unit
What Is a Milliliter of Butter?
A milliliter (mL) is a unit of volume in the metric system. One milliliter equals one-thousandth of a liter — or about 20 drops from a medicine dropper. A standard US measuring cup holds 236 mL. A 500 ml water bottle is roughly two cups.
Milliliters measure space, not weight. A milliliter of Butter and a milliliter of honey fill the same spot inside a graduated cylinder, but they land on a kitchen scale at very different readings. That's why converting from milliliters to grams always requires a density value.
In chemistry and medicine, milliliters appear on syringes, beakers, and IV bags — during pharmaceutical compounding, precise mL readings prevent dosing errors. In cooking, you'll find them on liquid ingredient labels and measuring cups. The metric system built the milliliter around water at 4°C — one mL of water at that temperature weighs exactly one gram.
Weight unit
What Is a Gram of Butter?
A gram (g) is a unit of mass in the metric system. One gram equals one-thousandth of a kilogram. A single paperclip weighs about 1 gram. A standard US nickel coin weighs 5 grams. 50 grams of Butter fits in the palm of your hand.
Grams measure weight, not volume. That's the opposite of milliliters. When a recipe or clinical procedure says "50 grams of Butter," it asks for a specific weight. This gives you more accurate results than scooping with a measuring cup, because weight stays consistent. 500 grams of Butter is always 500 grams — sifted, spooned, or compacted.
Professional bakers, pharmacists, and chemists prefer grams over volume for precision measurements. In a home garden, you might weigh fertilizer in grams. In medicine, dosing by grams avoids the guesswork of liquid measurements. The metric system ties everything back to the gram and kilogram as base units of mass.
100 mL of each ingredient — different weights
Common question
Is 1 mL of Butter Equal to 1 Gram?
Short answer: only if the density of the substance is exactly 1.00 g/mL (like pure water). Water was the reference point when the metric system was created. One milliliter of water at room temperature weighs one gram. That's not a coincidence — it's the definition.
For every other substance, including Butter, the answer changes. One mL of Butter weighs about 0.96 grams because of its specific density factor of 0.96 g/mL. For honey, the sugars pack tighter, making it 1.42 grams. For flour, the tiny air pockets make it only 0.53 grams.
This matters in cooking and baking. If a recipe says "100 mL of Butter" and you assume that equals 100 grams, you'll be off by a margin proportional to the density difference. A conversion calculator removes the guesswork by using the correct specific gravity coefficient.
Step by step
How to Convert Butter mL to Grams
The Butter conversion takes three simple steps. No special tools required — just the formula and the density value of 0.96 g/mL.
Pick your ingredient
Different substances have different densities. Water, milk, flour, sugar, honey, butter, and oil each carry their own density value in g/mL. The ingredient you choose sets the conversion factor for the entire calculation — here, it is Butter.
Look up the density
Find the density of your ingredient in grams per milliliter. For Butter, the density value is 0.96 g/mL. This ml to grams calculator has these built in.
Calculate the mass/volume
Multiply or divide based on direction: multiply mL by density to get grams. Example: 100 mL of Butter × 0.96 = 96 grams. The conversion calculator above runs this math automatically.
Conversion chart
Butter mL to Grams Conversion Table
This conversion table covers the most searched amounts — from 1 to 1000 — across our ingredients. Each value uses the ingredient's specific gravity to convert. Use this chart as a quick reference.
| mL | Water (1.00) | Milk (1.03) | Flour (All-Purpose) (0.53) | Sugar (Granulated) (0.85) | Honey (1.42) | Butter (0.96) | Cooking Oil (0.92) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 mL | 1 g | 1.03 g | 0.53 g | 0.85 g | 1.42 g | 0.96 g | 0.92 g |
| 5 mL | 5 g | 5.15 g | 2.65 g | 4.25 g | 7.1 g | 4.8 g | 4.6 g |
| 10 mL | 10 g | 10.3 g | 5.3 g | 8.5 g | 14.2 g | 9.6 g | 9.2 g |
| 50 mL | 50 g | 51.5 g | 26.5 g | 42.5 g | 71 g | 48 g | 46 g |
| 100 mL | 100 g | 103 g | 53 g | 85 g | 142 g | 96 g | 92 g |
| 236 mL | 236 g | 243.08 g | 125.08 g | 200.6 g | 335.12 g | 226.56 g | 217.12 g |
| 250 mL | 250 g | 257.5 g | 132.5 g | 212.5 g | 355 g | 240 g | 230 g |
| 500 mL | 500 g | 515 g | 265 g | 425 g | 710 g | 480 g | 460 g |
| 1000 mL | 1000 g | 1030 g | 530 g | 850 g | 1420 g | 960 g | 920 g |
Values use standard approximate densities at room temperature. Results may vary based on exact composition, temperature, and brand differences.
Reverse conversion
How Do You Convert Grams of Butter to mL?
The reverse conversion works just like the forward one, except you divide/multiply based on the direction. The formula: mL = Grams ÷ Density.
Say you have 500 grams of Butter and need to know how many milliliters that is. With a density of 0.96 g/mL, you divide: 500 ÷ 0.96 = 520.83 mL.
Grams to milliliters formula
mL = Grams ÷ Density500 g Water: 500 ÷ 1.00 = 500 mL
500 g Milk: 500 ÷ 1.03 = 485.44 mL
50 g Flour (All-Purpose): 50 ÷ 0.53 = 94.34 mL
50 g Sugar (Granulated): 50 ÷ 0.85 = 58.82 mL
500 g Honey: 500 ÷ 1.42 = 352.11 mL
50 g Butter: 50 ÷ 0.96 = 52.08 mL
50 g Cooking Oil: 50 ÷ 0.92 = 54.35 mL
Density reference
Butter Density & Specific Gravity
Every conversion for Butter depends on its density coefficient of 0.96 g/mL. Density determines how much mass exists within a specific volume.
Density tells you how tightly packed a substance is. Honey is thick — 1.42 grams in every milliliter. Flour is light and airy — just 0.53 grams per mL. Water sits right at 1.00 g/mL, the baseline for all comparisons in the metric system.
FAQs
Butter Conversion FAQs
Common questions about conversions, density values, and measurements.
How do I convert butter volume to weight?
Multiply the volume in milliliters by 0.96 to find the weight in grams. For instance, a half cup (118 mL) of butter weighs approximately 113.3 grams.
Does melted butter weigh the same as solid butter?
Yes, weight stays the same. However, solid butter often has air gaps when packed into a measuring cup, making it weigh less than expected. Weighing it resolves this variation.