Convert between millions, billions, trillions, lakhs, and crores instantly. See full numeric expansion and real-world comparisons.
The million to billion converter translates large numbers between Western and Indian numbering scales instantly. When dealing with budgets, populations, national debt figures, or astronomical quantities, it is easy to lose track of how many zeros separate millions from billions, or how lakhs and crores map to Western notation.
This tool converts between thousands, lakhs, millions, crores, billions, arabs, and trillions with full numeric expansion. Enter a value in any scale and see all equivalents at once, complete with a currency prefix, scientific notation, and a visual scale bar.
Whether you are reading an Indian financial report that quotes ₹500 crore and need the USD million equivalent, comparing GDP figures across countries that use different naming conventions, or simply trying to visualize how big a trillion really is, this calculator provides immediate clarity for finance, reporting, and decision-making workflows. It is especially helpful in board decks, investor updates, and policy summaries where one incorrect scale label can materially change interpretation.
Large number confusion costs real money. A misplaced comma or a wrong scale assumption can turn a million-dollar budget into a billion-dollar mistake. This converter bridges the Western (thousand/million/billion) and Indian (lakh/crore/arab) numbering systems and shows the fully expanded number so there is no ambiguity in communication and analysis. It also provides a consistent reference format teams can reuse across reports, proposals, and cross-border stakeholder discussions.
Number Scale Conversion: value_base = value_input × scale_factor. 1 Thousand = 1,000; 1 Lakh = 100,000; 1 Million = 1,000,000; 1 Crore = 10,000,000; 1 Billion = 1,000,000,000; 1 Arab = 1,000,000,000; 1 Trillion = 1,000,000,000,000.
Result: 1,000 Million, 10,000 Lakhs, 100 Crores
1 billion equals 1,000 million in Western notation, or 100 crores in the Indian numbering system. The fully expanded number is 1,000,000,000.
The Western numbering system groups digits in sets of three: thousands (10³), millions (10⁶), billions (10⁹), and trillions (10¹²). The Indian system groups differently after thousands: lakhs (10⁵) and crores (10⁷). This creates confusion when reading international news, financial reports, or scientific data that uses a different convention than your own.
Financial abbreviations like "M" and "B" are common in business, but context matters. In US finance, MM sometimes means millions (from Latin Mille Mille), while M alone can mean thousands. Always confirm the scale when large sums are involved. Company valuations, national budgets, and GDP figures routinely mix millions and billions.
India uses lakhs (1,00,000) and crores (1,00,00,000) with commas placed differently than Western notation. A number written as 1,50,00,000 in India equals 15,000,000 (15 million) in Western format. Understanding this mapping is essential for anyone doing cross-border business with South Asian markets.
There are 1,000 millions in one billion. In numeric form: 1,000,000,000 (nine zeros) versus 1,000,000 (six zeros). So 1 billion = 1,000 × 1 million.
There are 1,000 billions in one trillion. A trillion has twelve zeros: 1,000,000,000,000. Each step up (thousand → million → billion → trillion) multiplies by 1,000.
One lakh equals 0.1 million (100,000). So 10 lakhs = 1 million. The lakh is part of the Indian numbering system used in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Sri Lanka.
One crore equals 0.01 billion (10,000,000). So 100 crores = 1 billion. Alternatively, 1 crore = 10 million.
In the short scale (US, UK, modern international), 1 billion = 10^9 (1,000 million). In the long scale (some European countries), 1 billion = 10^12 (1 million million). This converter uses the short scale, which is the global business standard.
If you spent $1 per second: $1 million would take about 11.5 days, $1 billion would take about 31.7 years, and $1 trillion would take about 31,700 years. A billion is genuinely a thousand times larger than a million.