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Calories to Joules Converter 2026 | Free Energy Conversion Tool
Energy Conversion 2026

Calories to Joules Converter

Accurate energy conversion tool for calories and joules

Convert calories to joules instantly using the exact thermochemical factor: 1 cal = 4.184 J. Includes bidirectional conversion and full energy breakdowns across kcal, kJ, Wh, and BTU for nutrition, physics, chemistry, and everyday energy calculations in 2026.

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πŸ”₯ Calories to Joules Converter

Professional energy conversion for nutrition, physics, chemistry, engineering, and science education

βœ” Exact Conversion Factor

The thermochemical calorie is defined as exactly 4.184 joules. This is the internationally accepted value used in chemistry and nutrition science. So 1 cal = 4.184 J, and 1 kcal (food Calorie) = 4,184 J = 4.184 kJ. This is an exact, defined relationship β€” no rounding error from the conversion factor itself. Our converter applies this precise value at every input for perfectly accurate results across any energy magnitude.

βœ” Bidirectional Tool

Switch instantly between calories to joules and joules to calories conversion modes. Results also display across kilocalories (kcal), kilojoules (kJ), watt-hours (Wh), and British Thermal Units (BTU) β€” giving a complete energy picture from a single input for nutritionists, scientists, engineers, students, and athletes working across different energy unit systems.

βœ” Practical Applications

Essential for nutrition and dietetics (food energy in kcal vs kJ), physics and chemistry coursework (thermodynamics, calorimetry experiments), exercise science (calories burned during activity), engineering (thermal energy calculations), and international label reading β€” since food labels in Australia, the EU, and many other countries display energy in both kJ and kcal, while the USA uses kcal (labelled as "Calories" with a capital C).

πŸ”’ Calories to Joules Converter

Select conversion direction and enter your value below

1 cal = 4.184 J (thermochemical); 1 kcal = 4184 J. Note: food "Calories" are kilocalories (kcal).
1 J = 0.23885 cal; 4184 J = 1000 cal = 1 kcal (food Calorie)
Result
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Equivalent energy

Complete Energy Breakdown

Calories (cal)
0
Joules (J)
0
Kilocalories (kcal)
0
Kilojoules (kJ)
0
Watt-hours (Wh)
0
BTU
0

Detailed Breakdown

Understanding Calories to Joules Conversion

The calorie (cal) is a unit of energy originally defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water by 1 degree Celsius. The joule (J) is the SI unit of energy, defined as the work done when a force of 1 newton moves an object 1 metre (1 J = 1 NΒ·m = 1 kgΒ·mΒ²/sΒ²). The exact relationship between them β€” the thermochemical calorie β€” is defined as 1 cal = 4.184 J exactly. This value was established by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) and is used universally in chemistry, physics, and nutrition science.

A critical distinction to understand: the small calorie (cal) used in chemistry equals 4.184 J, while the large Calorie (Cal or kcal) used in food and nutrition equals 1,000 small calories = 4,184 J = 4.184 kJ. When a food label says a meal contains "500 Calories", it means 500 kcal = 500,000 cal = 2,092,000 joules = 2,092 kJ. The confusion between cal and kcal is one of the most common errors in nutrition and energy conversion β€” our converter handles both precisely, with the hint note clearly distinguishing the two.

πŸ“Œ Calories to Joules Formula

joules = calories Γ— 4.184
calories = joules Γ· 4.184
kilojoules = calories Γ— 0.004184
kilocalories = calories Γ· 1000
watt-hours = calories Γ— 4.184 Γ· 3600 = calories Γ— 0.0011622

Example: 500 cal Γ— 4.184 = 2,092 J = 2.092 kJ = 0.5 kcal  |  2000 J Γ· 4.184 = 478.0 cal

Calories to Joules Conversion Table

Quick reference values from a single small calorie through to food-label kilocalorie quantities and large-scale energy amounts used in science and engineering.

Calories (cal) Joules (J) Kilojoules (kJ) Kilocalories (kcal) Reference
1 cal4.184 J0.004184 kJ0.001 kcalOne small calorie
10 cal41.84 J0.04184 kJ0.01 kcalTen calories
100 cal418.4 J0.4184 kJ0.1 kcal100 small calories
239 cal1000 J1 kJ0.239 kcal1 kilojoule
1,000 cal4,184 J4.184 kJ1 kcal1 food Calorie (kcal)
2,000 cal8,368 J8.368 kJ2 kcal2 food Calories
10,000 cal41,840 J41.84 kJ10 kcal10 food Calories
100,000 cal418,400 J418.4 kJ100 kcal100 food Calories
500,000 cal2,092,000 J2,092 kJ500 kcalAverage meal
2,000,000 cal8,368,000 J8,368 kJ2,000 kcalDaily adult intake

Small Scale (cal)

1 cal4.184 J
100 cal418.4 J
239 cal1,000 J (1 kJ)

Nutrition Scale (kcal)

1,000 cal4,184 J = 1 kcal
500,000 cal2,092 kJ (1 meal)
2,000,000 cal8,368 kJ (daily)

Reverse: Joules β†’ Calories

1 J0.2389 cal
1,000 J (1 kJ)238.85 cal
4,184 J1,000 cal (1 kcal)

Key Facts About Calories and Joules

βš—οΈ The Calorie β€” History and Types

The calorie was first defined by French physicist Nicolas ClΓ©ment in 1824. Three types matter today: the thermochemical calorie (cal th) = 4.184 J exactly (used in chemistry and this converter); the International Table calorie (cal IT) = 4.1868 J (used in steam engineering); and the 15Β°C calorie (cal 15) β‰ˆ 4.18580 J (original definition). The difference is tiny (<0.1%) and only relevant in precision engineering. For all nutrition and general science purposes, 1 cal = 4.184 J.

⚑ The Joule β€” SI Energy Unit

The joule (J) is the SI derived unit of energy, named after English physicist James Prescott Joule (1818–1889), who demonstrated the equivalence of mechanical work and heat. It equals 1 kgΒ·mΒ²/sΒ² = 1 watt-second = 1 newton-metre. The joule is used across all branches of physics and engineering: 1 Wh = 3,600 J; 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J; 1 BTU = 1,055.06 J; 1 eV = 1.602Γ—10⁻¹⁹ J. The joule replaced the calorie as the preferred energy unit in science after the 1960 adoption of the SI system.

πŸ₯— Food Calories vs Small Calories

The most important distinction in this conversion: food labels use kilocalories (kcal), often called "Calories" (capital C) in the USA. A banana containing "90 Calories" contains 90 kcal = 90,000 small calories (cal) = 376,560 J = 376.6 kJ. In Australia and the EU, food labels typically show both kJ and kcal. The daily recommended adult energy intake is approximately 8,700 kJ (Australia) = 2,080 kcal = 2,080,000 small cal = 8,703,200 J. Always check whether a source means cal (small) or kcal (food Calorie) to avoid 1,000Γ— errors.

πŸƒ Exercise Energy in Calories and Joules

Exercise energy expenditure is typically quoted in kcal (food Calories) in fitness contexts. Running at 10 km/h burns approximately 600 kcal/hour = 600,000 cal/h = 2,510,400 J/h = 697.3 W (watts = joules per second). Cycling at moderate effort burns approximately 400 kcal/h = 1,673,600 J/h = 465 W. Swimming burns approximately 500 kcal/h = 2,092,000 J/h = 581 W. Basal metabolic rate (BMR) for an average adult is approximately 1,800 kcal/day = 87.2 W continuously β€” equivalent to a light bulb running at all times.

🌑️ Calorimetry β€” Measuring Energy

Calorimetry is the science of measuring heat exchange during physical or chemical processes. A bomb calorimeter measures the heat of combustion of substances β€” for example, burning 1 gram of fat releases approximately 9 kcal = 37,656 J; 1 g of carbohydrate releases β‰ˆ 4 kcal = 16,736 J; 1 g of protein releases β‰ˆ 4 kcal = 16,736 J. These values β€” the Atwater factors β€” are the basis of food energy labelling worldwide. Converting between calories and joules is fundamental to understanding calorimetry results published in both calorie and joule units across different scientific traditions.

πŸ”‹ Calories vs kWh β€” Energy at Scale

For larger energy quantities, the kilowatt-hour (kWh) is more practical. 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J = 860,421 cal = 860.4 kcal. A daily human diet of 2,000 kcal = 8,368,000 J β‰ˆ 2.324 kWh β€” less energy than running a hair dryer for 1.5 hours. A litre of petrol contains approximately 8,900 kcal = 37,253,600 J = 10.35 kWh of chemical energy. These comparisons illustrate why the joule is the preferred unit in engineering: it connects directly to watts (J/s) and kilowatt-hours (3.6 MJ), making electrical and thermal energy directly comparable.

⚠️ The cal vs kcal Confusion β€” Avoid 1,000Γ— Errors

The single most common error in calorie-to-joule conversion is confusing small calories (cal) with kilocalories (kcal / food Calories). A food label saying "200 Calories" means 200 kcal = 200,000 cal = 836,800 J β€” NOT 200 cal = 836.8 J. Always check the source: if it comes from a food label, recipe, or fitness tracker, it is almost certainly in kcal (food Calories). If it comes from a chemistry experiment, calorimetry reading, or physics problem using lowercase "cal", it is small calories. Our converter works with small calories (cal) by default β€” for food Calories (kcal), multiply your food value by 1,000 first, or use the kcal row in the results breakdown.

βœ… Common Uses for Calories to Joules Conversion

  • Nutrition β€” converting food energy values between kcal and kJ for international label comparison (Australia/EU show kJ; USA shows kcal)
  • Physics and chemistry coursework β€” converting calorimetry results between cal and J for lab reports
  • Exercise science β€” converting calories burned (kcal) to joules or watts for metabolic rate calculations
  • Thermodynamics β€” converting heat transfer quantities between calorie-based and SI unit systems
  • IELTS and academic English β€” understanding energy unit conversions described in science reading passages
  • Engineering β€” converting thermal energy data between calorie-based references and SI joule-based standards

Joules to Calories Reference Table

Reverse reference β€” converting joules back to calories for physics and chemistry contexts where results are given in joules and need to be expressed in calories for comparison with older literature.

Joules (J) Calories (cal) Kilocalories (kcal) Kilojoules (kJ) Reference
1 J0.23885 cal0.00023885 kcal0.001 kJOne joule
4.184 J1 cal0.001 kcal0.004184 kJOne small calorie
100 J23.885 cal0.02389 kcal0.1 kJ100 joules
1,000 J238.85 cal0.23885 kcal1 kJOne kilojoule
4,184 J1,000 cal1 kcal4.184 kJOne food Calorie
10,000 J2,388.5 cal2.3885 kcal10 kJ10 kJ
100,000 J23,885 cal23.885 kcal100 kJ100 kJ
3,600,000 J860,421 cal860.4 kcal3,600 kJ1 kWh

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How many joules are in one calorie?
One thermochemical calorie (cal) equals exactly 4.184 joules (J). This is the internationally accepted definition used in chemistry, physics, and nutrition science. So 10 cal = 41.84 J, 100 cal = 418.4 J, and 1,000 cal = 4,184 J = 4.184 kJ. Note that the "food Calorie" used on nutrition labels is actually a kilocalorie (kcal), which equals 1,000 small calories = 4,184 J.
How many joules is 2,000 food Calories (kcal)?
2,000 food Calories = 2,000 kcal = 2,000,000 small cal Γ— 4.184 J = 8,368,000 joules = 8,368 kJ. This is approximately the daily recommended energy intake for an average adult. Expressed in watt-hours: 8,368,000 J Γ· 3,600 = 2,324 Wh = 2.324 kWh β€” less electrical energy than running a typical washing machine for one full cycle.
What is the difference between cal and kcal?
1 kcal (kilocalorie) = 1,000 cal (small calories). In nutrition, food labels in the USA use "Calories" (capital C) to mean kcal β€” so "300 Calories" on a label means 300 kcal = 300,000 small cal = 1,255,200 J = 1,255.2 kJ. In chemistry and physics, "calorie" (lowercase) means the small calorie = 4.184 J. This 1,000Γ— difference is the most common source of error when converting food energy values to joules β€” always identify which unit your source is using before converting.
How do I convert kcal to kJ for food labels?
Multiply kcal by 4.184 to get kJ. For example: 100 kcal Γ— 4.184 = 418.4 kJ. This is the conversion used on Australian and EU food labels, which display both kJ and kcal. Conversely, divide kJ by 4.184 to get kcal: 1,000 kJ Γ· 4.184 = 239 kcal. A quick mental approximation: kJ β‰ˆ kcal Γ— 4.2, and kcal β‰ˆ kJ Γ· 4.2 (error <0.4%).
Why does science use joules instead of calories?
The joule replaced the calorie as the preferred scientific energy unit following the adoption of the International System of Units (SI) in 1960. The joule is coherent with other SI units: 1 J = 1 WΒ·s = 1 NΒ·m = 1 kgΒ·mΒ²/sΒ², allowing direct calculation across mechanics, electricity, and thermodynamics without conversion factors. The calorie, while intuitive for heat measurements, requires a conversion factor (4.184) whenever used with other physical quantities. Most scientific journals now require energy values in joules, though calories remain common in nutrition, biochemistry, and older literature.
How many calories are in a kilojoule (kJ)?
1 kilojoule (kJ) = 1,000 J Γ· 4.184 = 238.85 small calories (cal) = 0.23885 kcal (food Calories). So a food item with 500 kJ of energy contains 500 Γ— 238.85 = 119,427 small cal = 119.4 kcal = approximately 119 food Calories. Quick estimate: divide kJ by 4.2 to get approximate kcal (e.g. 500 kJ Γ· 4.2 β‰ˆ 119 kcal).
What is 1 calorie in watts?
A calorie is a quantity of energy, not a rate β€” so it cannot be directly expressed in watts (which measure power = energy per second) without specifying a time period. However: if 1 cal = 4.184 J is transferred in 1 second, the power is 4.184 W. If transferred over 1 minute, it is 4.184 J Γ· 60 s = 0.0697 W. The human body at rest (BMR β‰ˆ 1,800 kcal/day) produces: 1,800,000 cal Γ— 4.184 J Γ· 86,400 s = approximately 87 watts continuously β€” similar to a standard incandescent light bulb.

πŸ“š Energy and Nutrition Resources

πŸ›οΈ NIST β€” Energy Unit Standards

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) provides the authoritative US definition of the calorie and joule, including the exact 4.184 J/cal thermochemical value used in this converter. NIST SP 811 (Guide for the Use of SI) and the NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty document all energy unit relationships used in science and engineering.

Visit NIST β†’

πŸ₯— Food Standards Australia New Zealand

FSANZ sets the rules for food energy labelling in Australia and New Zealand, requiring kilojoules (kJ) as the primary energy unit on food labels, with kcal as an optional secondary unit. Understanding the kJ-to-kcal relationship (Γ·4.184) is essential for reading Australian food labels correctly and comparing with US labels in kcal.

Visit FSANZ β†’

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