Browse 419 free unit converters for length, weight, area, data, energy, and more. No download, no login — convert any unit instantly in your browser.
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Cubic Inches to Barrels Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Cubic Feet Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Cubic Meters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Cups Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Fluid Ounces Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Liters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Milliliters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Pints Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Quarts Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Tablespoons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to Teaspoons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to UK Gallons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Inches to US Gallons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Barrels Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Cubic Feet Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Cubic Inches Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Cups Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Fluid Ounces Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Liters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Milliliters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Pints Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Quarts Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Tablespoons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to Teaspoons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to UK Gallons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cubic Meters to US Gallons Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Cups to Milliliters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Curie to Gray Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Data Storage Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Days to Minutes Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Fahrenheit to Celsius Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Fahrenheit to Kelvin Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Centimeters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Furlongs Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Inches Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Inches Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Kilometers Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Light Years Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Meters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Meters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Micrometers Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Miles Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Millimeters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Nanometers Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Nautical Miles Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Yards Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Feet to Yards Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
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Fluid Ounces to Milliliters Converter
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Unit Converters | Open |
Showing 49–96 of 437 tools
Unit converters translate a quantity expressed in one measurement unit into its equivalent in another — acres to hectares, bytes to megabytes, calories to joules. No single catch-all converter handles every niche accurately, which is why this directory organizes specialized tools by category so you reach the right converter for your exact task in seconds. Every tool on this page runs entirely in your browser: nothing is installed, nothing is sent to a server.

A unit converter applies a mathematical relationship — a conversion factor or formula — to express a measurement in a different unit. Multiply meters by 3.28084 and you get feet. Subtract 32, multiply by 5, divide by 9, and Celsius becomes Fahrenheit. The arithmetic is simple in isolation, but problems surface when a single tool tries to cover everything at once.
Generic converters compress dozens of unit categories into one interface. To keep the UI manageable, they often round conversion factors, omit uncommon units, and strip context-specific precision. A jeweler converting carats to grams needs five decimal places; a generic mass converter might provide three. A pharmacist converting milligrams to grains needs the troy grain definition, not a rounded approximation. Specialized converters are built around a specific domain, so they include the right units, the right precision, and the correct reference definitions from the start.
This directory covers area, mass, data storage, energy, angle, temperature, speed, pressure, volume, fuel economy, and more. Each tool targets one conversion type so results are exact and the interface stays uncluttered. Because every tool runs client-side, nothing you type is sent to a server — your data stays local.
Area converters handle units like acres, hectares, square feet, square meters, square miles, and square yards. The unit in active use depends almost entirely on country and profession. US real estate agents quote land in acres; European agricultural reports use hectares; architects and flooring contractors work in square feet or square meters. The Acres to Hectares Converter handles the most common international land comparison directly, applying the exact factor of 1 acre = 0.404686 hectares without aggressive rounding. For property listings that need a domestic figure alongside a metric one, the Acres to Square Feet Converter delivers the imperial area in one step so you can confirm the number before adding the converted metric equivalent.
The mass category spans everyday units — grams, kilograms, pounds — and domain-specific ones: carats for gemstones, grains for ballistics and pharmacy, metric tons for freight. Each sub-unit exists because an industry standardized around the precision it needed historically. The Carats to Grams Converter applies the exact definition of 1 metric carat = 0.2 grams, which matters when valuing gemstones for customs declarations or insurance appraisals. The Carats to Grains Converter is used specifically by gemologists and antique jewelry appraisers who encounter older documentation expressed in grain weights.
Data storage conversions sit at the intersection of two competing standards: decimal (powers of 10, used by hard drive manufacturers) and binary (powers of 2, used by operating systems). One kilobyte is 1,000 bytes in decimal but 1,024 bytes in binary — that discrepancy explains why a drive marketed as 1 TB shows 931 GB in Windows. The Bytes to Kilobytes Converter lets developers and IT professionals choose which standard applies rather than having the tool assume one silently, which is the only way to get a result that matches what the OS or the spec sheet will report.
The Calories to Joules Converter covers a conversion that appears in nutrition labels, physics coursework, and mechanical engineering specs. One food calorie (kilocalorie) equals 4,184 joules. One thermochemical calorie equals 4.184 joules. The difference is a factor of 1,000, large enough to invalidate a lab report or a dietary calculation if the wrong definition is assumed going in.
The Angle Converter handles degrees, radians, and gradians. Degrees are the default in everyday geometry; radians are required for most calculus and physics formulas; gradians (400 per full circle) are standard in European surveying and some CNC machine programming. Feeding degrees into a formula that expects radians produces a silent numerical error — the output looks like a valid number, just the wrong one.
Speed converters handle miles per hour to kilometers per hour, relevant for vehicle specifications and international shipping. Volume converters cover fluid ounces, liters, and cubic meters. Fuel economy tools convert miles per gallon to liters per 100 km, the format on European vehicle window stickers. Pressure converters switch between PSI, bar, pascals, and atmospheres for engineering and HVAC applications. Browse the full grid on this page to locate the specific pair you need.
Not every converter delivers equally. These are the characteristics that determine whether a tool saves time or creates friction.
The category grid on this page lists every available converter. Here is how to narrow down to the right one for a specific situation.
Physics homework regularly requires joules, calories, radians, and meters per second. Geography assignments need kilometers to miles and hectares to acres. Having the right converter open alongside a textbook saves manual arithmetic and reduces transcription errors when numbers go into a lab report or a submitted assignment. Side-by-side converter windows also help students build intuition for unit relationships rather than just copying outputs.
Product listings targeting both US and EU buyers need dimensions in inches and centimeters, weights in pounds and grams. Sellers listing simultaneously on US and European marketplaces use mass and length converters constantly. Getting a product weight wrong by a small margin can shift a shipment into a different carrier rate bracket, which affects margin at scale.
MLS listings in the US report lot size in acres. International buyers expect hectares. A real estate agent working with overseas investors can use the acres-to-hectares converter to add a converted figure to every listing description without recalculating manually. For subdivided parcels, the acres-to-square-feet converter gives the floor-plan-scale figure that contractors and appraisers use when planning improvements.
Developers documenting storage requirements, sizing cloud instances, or writing data-transfer specifications need byte conversions that make the binary or decimal standard explicit. The distinction matters in SLAs, capacity plans, and user-facing documentation where a stated value needs to match what the operating system actually reports. Combine these tools with resources in the Dev Utilities category for a complete technical workflow that covers encoding, formatting, and data sizing in one place.
Gemstone weight is quoted in metric carats internationally, but customs declarations in some jurisdictions still reference grams or grains from historical tariff schedules. Jewelers use carat-to-gram and carat-to-grain converters when preparing export documentation or authenticating estate pieces against older appraisal records where the grain was the standard weight unit.
Nutrition labels in the US report calories (kilocalories); scientific literature uses joules or kilojoules. Medication dosing in pharmacy crosses milligrams, grams, and occasionally grains, particularly in legacy prescribing contexts. Having definition-explicit converters — ones that state which calorie they are using — reduces the risk of a 1,000× error that occurs when large and small calorie definitions are confused. The Health & Fitness category includes complementary tools for BMI, body composition, and other clinical metrics alongside these unit converters.
CNC machine paths are typically programmed in degrees, but some CAD software outputs radians or gradians depending on locale settings. A machinist who misreads the unit annotation can produce a part with an arc cut at the wrong angle — a defect that may not be visible until assembly. Pressure and torque conversions — PSI to bar, foot-pounds to newton-meters — appear throughout mechanical specs and require the same unit clarity that a labeled, specialized converter provides.
Google's unit converter is fast and works for common pairs: miles to kilometers, Fahrenheit to Celsius, pounds to kilograms. Its limitations appear at the edges: it does not support carats to grains, does not let you choose between binary and decimal for data storage, and rounds to a fixed decimal count regardless of precision requirements. For everyday quick lookups, it is adequate. For professional or niche conversions, it falls short.
Downloadable apps for Windows and Android work offline and can handle batch conversions, but they require installation, periodic updates, and storage allocation. For a user who needs a conversion once a week, installing an app adds more effort than the task justifies. For a field engineer with no internet access who runs dozens of conversions daily, an offline app is the appropriate choice.
Browser-based tools occupy the practical middle ground: zero installation, always current, accessible from any device including shared work computers where software installation is restricted. They load quickly on slow connections, and because they run client-side once loaded, a metered connection does not affect performance mid-conversion.
Discussion threads in communities like r/software and r/datacurator consistently reach the same conclusion: lightweight browser tools work well for one-off and occasional conversions; dedicated apps are worth the overhead only for repeated, high-volume workflows that benefit from offline access or integration with desktop software pipelines.
Before 1795, Europe had hundreds of local measurement systems. A foot in Paris differed from a foot in London. Trade across borders required city-specific conversion tables, and errors were routine. The metric system, introduced in France in 1795, standardized length, mass, and volume around powers of 10 and physical constants rather than arbitrary historical references.
The International System of Units (SI) was formally established in 1960 as the global scientific standard. It defines seven base units — the meter, kilogram, second, ampere, kelvin, mole, and candela — from which all other scientific units derive. Almost every country has officially adopted SI. The United States uses it in science, medicine, and federal regulation but retains US customary units for commercial and consumer use, creating an ongoing dual-standard environment that requires constant conversion for anyone working internationally.
The consequences of unit confusion are not theoretical. In 1999, NASA's Mars Climate Orbiter was lost because one engineering team used pound-force seconds and another used newton-seconds for the same thruster output values. Neither team caught the mismatch before the spacecraft entered the wrong trajectory and was destroyed. The $327 million loss became the standard case study cited in engineering curricula worldwide when discussing unit discipline and the importance of verification.
The continued US use of customary units is not a matter of technological lag. It reflects deep infrastructure investment — road signs, pipe fittings, building materials — consumer habit, and legal standards embedded in building codes, land records, and commercial contracts that would require enormous coordinated effort to revise. The practical outcome for anyone working across borders is that both systems remain active simultaneously and reliable conversion tools remain a daily operational need.
As global e-commerce and distributed work continue to grow, the volume of unit conversions performed daily increases proportionally. A manufacturer in Vietnam listing products for buyers in Germany and the United States navigates three measurement contexts simultaneously. A remote engineering team split across the US and Europe reviews the same CAD drawing in different default unit systems. The demand for accurate, accessible conversion tools scales with the volume of cross-border work. The Science Tools category includes physics constants, formula calculators, and reference data that complement unit conversion for technical workflows that go beyond a single unit pair.