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Unit Converter

Convert between common clinical units — weight, mass, volume, length and temperature. Free nursing calculator for unit converter. AU and US compatible.

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Drug chart says 0.5 g, you have mg on hand. Or the patient's temperature is in Fahrenheit and you need Celsius for documentation. You need the conversion before anything else.

Unit Converter
Converter
× 1000: g→mg · mg→mcg · L→mL ÷ 1000: mg→g · mcg→mg · mL→L lb→kg: × 0.4536 · °C→°F: ×9/5+32 Normal body temp: 36.1–37.2°C (97–99°F)
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Converts between common clinical units: mass (mg, g, mcg), volume (mL, L), length (cm, m, inches), weight (kg, lb) and temperature (°C, °F). Covers the conversions that come up most often in medication rounds and clinical documentation.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Mass: 1 g = 1,000 mg = 1,000,000 mcg | 1 mg = 1,000 mcg Weight: 1 kg = 2.2046 lb | 1 lb = 0.4536 kg Temp: °C = (°F − 32) × 5/9 | °F = (°C × 9/5) + 32 Volume: 1 L = 1,000 mL

Clinical unit errors are a leading cause of medication harm. The three highest-risk conversions in nursing are: (1) g to mg (10× errors on drug doses), (2) lb to kg (weight-based dosing errors in patients who report weight in pounds), and (3) mcg to mg (1,000× errors on vasoactive drugs and electrolytes). Knowing the base relationships prevents calculator dependence for simple conversions.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Grams to milligrams
Given: 0.5 g paracetamol ordered
Working: 0.5 × 1,000
Answer: 500 mg
💡 Stock is in mg — this is the value to enter into your dose calculation.
Standard
Pounds to kilograms for dosing
Given: Patient reports weight as 176 lb
Working: 176 ÷ 2.2046
Answer: 79.8 kg (rounds to 80 kg)
💡 Always use kg for weight-based medication calculations. Round to nearest 0.5 or 1 kg.
Advanced
Temperature Fahrenheit to Celsius
Given: Patient's US records show temperature 101.3 °F
Working: (101.3 − 32) × 5/9 = 69.3 × 0.556
Answer: 38.5 °C — low-grade fever
💡 Australian documentation is always in Celsius. 38.0°C is the standard fever threshold.

4 Sanity check

g → mg: multiply by 1,000
0.5 g = 500 mg · 1.5 g = 1,500 mg
The most common conversion error in drug calculations.
mcg → mg: divide by 1,000
500 mcg = 0.5 mg · 50 mcg = 0.05 mg
Digoxin, fentanyl, alfentanil: always in mcg — convert carefully.
lb → kg: divide by 2.2
154 lb ≈ 70 kg · 220 lb = 100 kg
Quick mental check: 2.2 lb per kg.
Normal body temp
36.1–37.2 °C · 97–99 °F
Fever: ≥38.0°C (100.4°F). Hypothermia: <35.0°C (95°F).

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Confusing mcg and mg Decimal point placement or abbreviation misread 1,000× dosing error — potentially fatal for vasoactive drugs Write 'mcg' never 'µg' in clinical notes. Double-check every conversion between mcg and mg.
Using 2.2 to convert kg to lb (wrong direction) Multiplying instead of dividing Patient appears to weigh 2.2× their actual weight To get kg from lb: divide by 2.2. To get lb from kg: multiply by 2.2.
Rounding intermediate conversions Converting and rounding before using in a further calculation Compounding rounding error Complete all conversions first, then round only at the final answer
Using Fahrenheit thresholds in a Celsius environment Working from US reference materials Fever or hypothermia missed AU/UK/NZ use Celsius exclusively. Fever threshold is 38.0°C (not 100.4°F)