Convert between drops and milliliters with selectable dropper types (standard, medical, essential oil, fine). Teaspoon fill bar, common dosage table, and bidirectional conversion.
Converting between drops and milliliters is essential for anyone working with medications, essential oils, food coloring, or any small-volume liquid measurement. The challenge is that drop size varies depending on the dropper type — a standard dropper produces drops of about 0.05 mL, while essential oil droppers are often 0.03 mL per drop. Using the wrong conversion factor can lead to incorrect dosing or recipe proportions.
This calculator lets you select from four dropper types and convert bidirectionally between drops, milliliters, teaspoons, tablespoons, fluid ounces, and liters. A visual teaspoon fill bar shows how many drops you need to fill a teaspoon, and a reference table lists common products with their typical drop counts and volumes.
Whether you are measuring medication doses, mixing essential oil blends, adding food coloring to batter, or formulating homeopathic remedies, this tool ensures your drop-to-volume conversions are accurate for your specific dropper type and use case.
Drop size changes across droppers, liquids, and handling style, so simple one-factor conversion can cause dosing and mixing errors. This tool helps users select the right dropper profile, compare results in multiple volume units, and check practical reference values for safer medication use, recipe scaling, and routine lab or home measurements.
Volume (mL) = Number of drops × mL per drop Standard/Medical dropper: 1 drop ≈ 0.05 mL (20 drops per mL) Essential oil dropper: 1 drop ≈ 0.03 mL (≈33 drops per mL) Fine dropper: 1 drop ≈ 0.025 mL (40 drops per mL)
Result: 1 mL
20 drops × 0.05 mL/drop = 1.0 mL. With a standard dropper (0.05 mL per drop), 20 drops equal exactly 1 milliliter.
The volume of a single drop depends on three factors: the dropper opening diameter, the liquid's viscosity and surface tension, and the angle at which the dropper is held. Water and saline produce drops of about 0.05 mL from a standard dropper, while thick oils and viscous liquids produce larger drops.
For prescription medications, the dropper provided with the medication is calibrated for that specific liquid. Never substitute a different dropper. Over-the-counter products like eye drops, ear drops, and vitamin supplements follow standard drop sizes, but always read the label for specific instructions.
Essential oil bottles use reducer caps that produce drops of approximately 0.03 mL. A typical diffuser recipe calls for 3-10 drops, which is 0.09-0.30 mL. For topical application, essential oils are usually diluted at 2-3% in a carrier oil — about 10-15 drops per tablespoon of carrier.
With a standard dropper (0.05 mL/drop), there are 20 drops per mL. Essential oil droppers have about 33 drops per mL.
No. Drop size depends on the dropper opening, liquid viscosity, and surface tension. Water drops from a standard dropper are about 0.05 mL, but essential oil drops are smaller (0.03 mL).
About 100 standard drops (0.05 mL each) or about 164 essential oil drops (0.03 mL each). One teaspoon is approximately 4.93 mL.
For most purposes, medical and standard drops are the same (0.05 mL). However, always use the calibrated dropper provided with medications for precise dosing.
Essential oil bottles have reducer caps (orifice reducers) with smaller openings that produce drops of about 0.03 mL. This allows more precise control of concentrated oils.
Hold the dropper vertically, allow drops to fall freely under gravity, and count each drop. Squeezing or tilting can change drop size significantly.