Convert pounds to grams and vice versa. Shows results in kg, oz, mg, stones, and troy ounces with common weight references and visual scale.
This converter handles one of the most common metric-imperial weight changes: pounds to grams. One pound equals exactly 453.59237 grams, so it is useful whenever a US weight needs to be restated on a metric label, recipe, shipping document, or lab note.
It also shows kilograms, ounces, milligrams, stones, and troy ounces at the same time. That helps when grams are the main answer but nearby units still matter for comparison, scaling, or documentation. A grocery ingredient, parcel weight, or body-weight measurement can be translated once and then copied into whichever format the reader expects.
Use it for packaging, cooking, shopping, and any situation where pound values need a clean metric equivalent. The extra unit outputs make it easier to double-check that the conversion fits the context before you move on. It is especially handy when grams are required for labeling but the source measurement was taken in pounds or ounces.
Pounds are still common in US-facing contexts, while grams are the default small-mass unit almost everywhere else. This page gives the exact gram result first and keeps the nearby units visible so one input can be reused across labels, recipes, shipping specs, and comparison charts without a second conversion step.
Grams = Pounds × 453.59237 Pounds = Grams ÷ 453.59237 1 lb = 453.59237 g (exact, international avoirdupois pound)
Result: 1,133.98 grams (1.134 kg, 40 oz)
2.5 lbs × 453.59237 = 1,133.98 grams. This also equals 1.134 kg, 40 ounces, or about 36.45 troy ounces.
The avoirdupois system of weights, used in the US and UK for most everyday purposes, defines 1 pound = 16 ounces = 7,000 grains = 453.59237 grams. The word "avoirdupois" comes from Old French meaning "goods of weight." This system has been standardized internationally since 1959 when English-speaking nations agreed on the exact gram equivalent.
The metric system's gram and kilogram are the universal standards for international trade, scientific research, and manufacturing. Products sold globally must declare weights in metric units. Even in the US, nutritional labels use grams, medication is dosed in milligrams, and scientific instruments measure in metric. The pound persists mainly in consumer-facing contexts.
The relationship between pounds and grams is exact by definition: 1 lb = 453.59237 g with no rounding. However, in practice, digital scales and measuring instruments have limited precision. Kitchen scales typically resolve to 1 g, postal scales to 0.1 oz, and laboratory balances to 0.001 g. Choose your decimal precision based on your measuring instrument's capability.
Exactly 453.59237 grams. That is the internationally agreed definition of the avoirdupois pound, so the converter stays exact before any display rounding happens.
The avoirdupois pound (453.59237 g) is standard in the US, UK, and most English-speaking countries. The troy pound is smaller and is used only for precious metals, so this page sticks to the everyday pound.
Grams provide more precision for small quantities and scale cleanly when a recipe is doubled or halved. That is why bakers and food scientists often prefer grams, even when the rest of the kitchen uses pounds or ounces.
Multiply ounces by 28.3495 to get grams. Since 1 pound equals 16 ounces, you can also convert pounds first and then split the result into smaller units if you want a mixed-pound display.
A troy ounce is 31.1035 grams, which is heavier than a regular avoirdupois ounce. It is used mainly for precious metals like gold and silver, not for food or shipping weights.
A stone equals 14 pounds, or about 6.35 kilograms. It is commonly used in the UK and Ireland for body weight measurement, so the converter includes it for quick reference.