Oz to Cups Converter

The Oz to Cups Converter handles the kitchen conversion every recipe demands at some point — fluid ounces to cups, or back. Pick your measurement system (US, UK Imperial, or Metric), enter a value, and get the conversion instantly. The widget supports both directions and includes a quick reference table for the most common pairings (1 cup, 1/2 cup, 1/4 cup, etc.).

Common kitchen conversions (US)
1 oz
0.125 cups
2 oz
0.25 cups
4 oz
0.5 cups
6 oz
0.75 cups
8 oz
1 cup
16 oz
2 cups
24 oz
3 cups
32 oz
4 cups

How to use

  1. 1

    Pick the measurement system that matches your recipe — US standard (8 fl oz per cup) is the default, UK uses Imperial (10 imp fl oz per cup), and Metric defines a cup as 250 mL.

  2. 2

    Enter the value you have in either fluid ounces or cups.

  3. 3

    The other field updates instantly with the converted amount.

  4. 4

    Use the swap button (⇄) to flip the direction if you want to convert the other way.

  5. 5

    Reference the common-conversion table below for the standard kitchen pairings (1 cup = 8 oz, 1/2 cup = 4 oz, 1/4 cup = 2 oz, etc.).

Frequently asked questions

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How the Oz to Cups Converter Works

The widget on this page handles three slightly different cup definitions — US standard, UK Imperial, and Metric — because that's the actual mess every cook hits when using a recipe from a different country. Pick the system, enter your value in either fluid ounces or cups, and the other side updates instantly.

For US recipes, the standard is 8 US fluid ounces per cup. That's the default. UK Imperial uses 10 Imperial fluid ounces per cup (slightly larger because Imperial fl oz are slightly smaller). The Metric cup is defined as exactly 250 mL, which works out to about 8.45 US fluid ounces.

Worked example. A US recipe calls for 12 fl oz of milk. How many cups is that?
12 ÷ 8 = 1.5 cups.
Now if a UK recipe calls for 12 Imperial fl oz of milk, that's 12 ÷ 10 = 1.2 UK cups. The number changes because the cup itself is bigger in the UK system.

Quick Reference — US Cup ↔ Fluid Ounces

CupsFluid ounces (US)Milliliters (approx.)
1/4 cup2 fl oz59 mL
1/3 cup2.67 fl oz79 mL
1/2 cup4 fl oz118 mL
2/3 cup5.33 fl oz158 mL
3/4 cup6 fl oz177 mL
1 cup8 fl oz237 mL
1.5 cups12 fl oz355 mL
2 cups (1 pint)16 fl oz473 mL
4 cups (1 quart)32 fl oz946 mL

Why the Three Systems Exist

US. The US customary cup is 8 US fluid ounces, where the US fl oz is defined as 1/128 of a US gallon. The system was set in 1832 and hasn't changed.

UK Imperial. The UK Imperial cup, when used, is 10 Imperial fluid ounces — but the Imperial fluid ounce is slightly different from the US one (28.4 mL vs 29.6 mL). In modern UK cooking, the cup is rarely used at all — UK recipes overwhelmingly use grams and milliliters. When a UK recipe says "1 cup," it typically means the Metric 250 mL cup unless explicitly stated.

Metric. The Metric cup is defined as exactly 250 mL. Used in Australia, New Zealand, Canada (post-1970), and most countries that adopted SI units. The Metric cup is slightly larger than the US cup (250 mL vs 237 mL — about 5.5% difference), which is enough to throw off baking but doesn't matter much for soups or stews.

Dry Ounces vs Fluid Ounces — The Trap

An ounce can mean two completely different things in the kitchen:

  • Fluid ounce (fl oz) — a unit of volume. 1 fl oz = ~29.6 mL. This converter is about fluid ounces.
  • Dry ounce (oz) — a unit of weight. 1 oz = ~28.35 grams. NOT what this converter measures.

For water, 1 fl oz weighs almost exactly 1 oz, which is where the confusion comes from. But for flour, sugar, or anything with a different density, the two diverge dramatically. 1 cup of all-purpose flour is 8 fl oz (volume) but only ~4.5 oz (weight). 1 cup of granulated sugar is 8 fl oz (volume) and ~7 oz (weight). When converting weight measurements (grams, ounces of weight), use the Grams to Ounces converter, not this one.

Common Cooking Conversions

Butter. 1 stick of US butter = 8 tablespoons = 4 oz weight = 1/2 cup. Most US butter wrappers have tablespoon markings — use those instead of measuring.

Recipes scaled up or down. When doubling a recipe that calls for 1.5 cups of liquid: 1.5 × 2 = 3 cups, or 24 fl oz, or 710 mL. The math doesn't break — but the recipe might (cooking times, oven heat, pan size all scale non-linearly).

Reading international recipes. A British recipe saying "1 cup" usually means 250 mL (Metric cup). A 1950s American recipe means 8 US fl oz. Most modern American recipes also mean 8 US fl oz. When in doubt, weigh ingredients in grams instead of using volume — weight is unambiguous.

Related Tools

For converting milliliters and fluid ounces directly, use the Ml to Oz Converter. For weighing dry ingredients (flour, sugar, butter), the Grams to Ounces converter is the right choice. For broader unit conversion across length, weight, temperature, and more, see the Unit Converter.