Pounds to Stone Converter

Convert pounds to stone with a visual scale and comprehensive reference table. Shows stone-and-pounds breakdown plus kilograms for every value.

About the Pounds to Stone Converter

The pounds to stone converter turns a plain pound value into the stone-and-pounds format still used in the UK and Ireland for body weight. One stone equals exactly 14 pounds, so the result needs both the whole-stone count and the leftover pounds. That makes the conversion different from a simple decimal unit change because the output is usually written as a mixed number, not just a single figure.

This converter shows the decimal stone value, the traditional st+lb breakdown, and the kilogram equivalent. The visual scale and reference tables are there to make common body-weight conversions quicker, especially if you need to move back and forth between US and UK formats. It is also useful when a fitness app, article, or clinic note uses stone while the value you have is in pounds.

Use it when a weight is written in pounds but needs to be understood the way a UK scale, fitness app, or health article would present it. The calculator keeps the stone-and-pounds reading visible so the answer is immediately usable in everyday context.

Why Use This Pounds to Stone Converter?

Stone is still the default everyday body-weight unit for many UK and Irish users, while pounds are more familiar in the US. This converter bridges that gap without forcing you to do repeated divide-by-14 mental math. It is especially helpful when the result needs to be spoken, written, or compared in the same mixed format people actually use.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your weight in pounds.
  2. Or select another source unit (stone, kg, oz).
  3. Read the stone-and-pounds breakdown.
  4. Check the visual stone scale.
  5. Use presets for common body weights.
  6. Consult the table for batch lookups.
  7. Expand the stone multiples reference for clean values.

Formula

Stone = Pounds ÷ 14. Remaining pounds = Pounds mod 14. Kilograms = Pounds × 0.453592.

Example Calculation

Result: 150 lb = 10.71 st = 10 st 10 lb = 68.04 kg

150 ÷ 14 = 10.71 stone. 10 × 14 = 140, remainder = 10 pounds. So 10 stone 10 pounds. 150 × 0.453592 = 68.04 kg.

Tips & Best Practices

Stone in Everyday UK Life

In the UK, you might hear: "She lost two stone" (28 lb / 12.7 kg) or "He weighs fifteen stone" (210 lb / 95.3 kg). This is as natural there as Americans saying "She lost thirty pounds." Understanding stone is essential for anyone interacting with British culture.

When Stone Was Not 14

Before 1835, the stone varied by commodity. Wool was measured at 14 lb per stone, but cheese used 16 lb, meat used 8 lb, and glass used a 5 lb stone. The 1835 Act standardized all to 14 lb.

Three Systems Compared

Americans use pounds, Brits use stone-and-pounds, and most of the world uses kilograms. A person weighing 165 lb = 11 st 11 lb ≈ 74.8 kg. All three are correct and commonly used within their respective regions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many pounds in a stone?

1 stone = exactly 14 pounds. That fixed ratio is what makes the stone-to-pound conversion straightforward once you know the rule.

How many stone is 160 lbs?

160 ÷ 14 = 11.43 stone, or 11 stone 6 pounds. The decimal and mixed-number forms are both valid, but the mixed form is what UK readers usually expect.

How many stone is 200 lbs?

200 ÷ 14 = 14.29 stone, or 14 stone 4 pounds. That is the same relationship the calculator uses for any pound input.

Is stone still used today?

Yes, in the UK and Ireland. Stone is the default unit for body weight in everyday conversation, on bathroom scales, and in health discussions, even though kilograms are used in medical records.

How many kilograms in a stone?

1 stone = 6.35029 kilograms. That is the metric equivalent used when the result needs to be compared with international weight data.

Why is a stone 14 pounds?

The British Weights and Measures Act of 1835 standardized 1 stone at 14 pounds. Historically, the stone varied from 8 to 24 pounds depending on the commodity being weighed, so the modern value is a legal standard rather than an old universal constant.

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