ConcreteMetric Navigation Menu
Grams to Milligrams Converter | Free Online g to mg Calculator
⚖️ Free Online Mass Converter

Grams to Milligrams Converter

Instantly Convert Grams ↔ Milligrams — Both Directions

Convert grams to milligrams (g → mg) or milligrams to grams (mg → g) instantly. Get the exact conversion with formula breakdown, reference table, and real-world examples — all free, no sign-up needed.

✅ Grams → Milligrams
✅ Milligrams → Grams
✅ Exact Formula
✅ Reference Table

Grams to Milligrams (g to mg) Converter

The gram and milligram are both metric units of mass within the International System of Units (SI). Converting between them is simple — 1 gram equals exactly 1,000 milligrams. Our converter handles both directions instantly and accurately.

⚖️ What is a Gram?

The gram (g) is a metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth of a kilogram — the SI base unit of mass. The gram is used worldwide for everyday measurements such as food portions, ingredients in recipes, body weight supplements, and product labels. One gram is defined as exactly 1/1,000 of a kilogram, or equivalently 1,000 milligrams. It is the standard unit on kitchen scales and nutritional information panels globally.

💊 What is a Milligram?

The milligram (mg) is one thousandth of a gram and one millionth of a kilogram. It is used to measure very small masses — particularly in medicine, pharmaceuticals, chemistry, and nutrition. Drug dosages, vitamin supplements, and micronutrients are almost universally expressed in milligrams. For example, a standard aspirin tablet contains 500 mg (= 0.5 g), and the recommended daily intake of Vitamin C is approximately 1,000 mg (= 1 g).

🔢 The Conversion Factor

The exact conversion factor is 1 gram = 1,000 milligrams — this is an exact metric relationship, not an approximation. The prefix "milli-" means one thousandth (10⁻³), so 1 milligram = 0.001 grams by definition. For the reverse: 1 milligram = 0.001 grams. All conversions on this page use these exact values with no rounding errors.

⚖️ Grams to Milligrams Converter

Choose a direction, enter your value, and get an instant conversion

Converted Value
mg
Kilograms
Micrograms
Ounces
Pounds
Metric Mass Scale — Kilogram, Gram & Milligram 1 kg = 1,000 g 1 g = 1,000 mg 1 mg = 0.001 g 1 Kilogram = 1,000 g 1 Gram = 1,000 mg 1 Milligram = 0.001 g 1 kg = 1,000 g = 1,000,000 mg (exact SI metric relationships)

Figure: Metric mass scale showing the relationship between kilograms, grams, and milligrams

Grams to Milligrams Formula

The conversion between grams and milligrams is one of the simplest in the metric system — it is based on a pure power of ten. The prefix "milli" means 10⁻³, so 1 milligram is exactly one thousandth of a gram. This relationship is exact and universal across all fields of science, medicine, and everyday use. For more metric conversions, visit our full converter collection.

⚖️ Grams → Milligrams Formula

milligrams = grams × 1,000
Example: 0.5 g × 1,000 = 500 mg
Example: 2.5 g × 1,000 = 2,500 mg

💊 Milligrams → Grams Formula

grams = milligrams ÷ 1,000   (= milligrams × 0.001)
Example: 500 mg ÷ 1,000 = 0.5 g
Example: 2,500 mg ÷ 1,000 = 2.5 g
💡 Quick Mental Tip: To convert grams to milligrams, simply move the decimal point 3 places to the right (multiply by 1,000). To convert milligrams to grams, move the decimal point 3 places to the left (divide by 1,000). For example: 0.25 g → 250 mg; 750 mg → 0.75 g. No calculator needed!

⚡ Quick Reference — Common Grams to Milligrams Conversions

0.001 g1 mg
0.01 g10 mg
0.1 g100 mg
0.5 g500 mg
1 g1,000 mg
2.5 g2,500 mg
5 g5,000 mg
10 g10,000 mg

Grams to Milligrams Conversion Table

The table below lists commonly needed gram-to-milligram conversions used in medicine, nutrition, cooking, and science. All values use the exact factor of 1 g = 1,000 mg. For milligrams to grams, simply divide the mg value by 1,000 or use the converter above.

Grams (g) Milligrams (mg) Micrograms (µg) Kilograms (kg) Common Context
0.001 g1 mg1,000 µg0.000001 kgSmall drug trace amount
0.005 g5 mg5,000 µg0.000005 kgLow-dose vitamin tablet
0.01 g10 mg10,000 µg0.00001 kgSmall medication dose
0.05 g50 mg50,000 µg0.00005 kgCommon tablet dose
0.1 g100 mg100,000 µg0.0001 kgStandard supplement dose
0.2 g200 mg200,000 µg0.0002 kgIbuprofen tablet
0.25 g250 mg250,000 µg0.00025 kgHalf an aspirin (500 mg)
0.5 g500 mg500,000 µg0.0005 kgStandard aspirin tablet
1 g1,000 mg1,000,000 µg0.001 kg1,000 mg Vitamin C dose
2 g2,000 mg2,000,000 µg0.002 kgAntibiotic daily dose (approx.)
5 g5,000 mg5,000,000 µg0.005 kgCreatine supplement serving
10 g10,000 mg10,000,000 µg0.01 kgSmall seasoning portion
50 g50,000 mg50,000,000 µg0.05 kgSmall chocolate bar
100 g100,000 mg100,000,000 µg0.1 kgStandard food portion

Milligrams to Grams Conversion Table

The table below shows common milligram values converted to grams. All values use the exact factor of 1 mg = 0.001 g. This is particularly useful in pharmaceutical and medical settings where dosages in milligrams need to be weighed on gram-based scales.

Milligrams (mg) Grams (g) Kilograms (kg) Micrograms (µg)
1 mg0.001 g0.000001 kg1,000 µg
5 mg0.005 g0.000005 kg5,000 µg
10 mg0.01 g0.00001 kg10,000 µg
50 mg0.05 g0.00005 kg50,000 µg
100 mg0.1 g0.0001 kg100,000 µg
200 mg0.2 g0.0002 kg200,000 µg
250 mg0.25 g0.00025 kg250,000 µg
500 mg0.5 g0.0005 kg500,000 µg
1,000 mg1 g0.001 kg1,000,000 µg
2,500 mg2.5 g0.0025 kg2,500,000 µg
5,000 mg5 g0.005 kg5,000,000 µg
10,000 mg10 g0.01 kg10,000,000 µg
100,000 mg100 g0.1 kg100,000,000 µg

When Do You Need to Convert Grams to Milligrams?

The grams-to-milligrams conversion is one of the most frequently needed metric conversions in everyday life — from reading medicine labels and following recipes to conducting scientific experiments and tracking nutrition.

💊 Medicine & Pharmaceuticals

Drug dosages are almost always expressed in milligrams on packaging — a standard paracetamol tablet is 500 mg = 0.5 g, and a common ibuprofen tablet is 200 mg = 0.2 g. Pharmacists and healthcare professionals regularly convert between grams and milligrams when calculating dosages, compounding medications, or interpreting prescriptions written in different units.

🥗 Nutrition & Dietary Supplements

Nutritional labels list vitamins and minerals in milligrams or micrograms, while food portions are measured in grams. The recommended daily intake of Vitamin C is 1,000 mg = 1 g; iron is about 18 mg = 0.018 g. Athletes, dietitians, and health-conscious individuals routinely convert between these units when planning supplement intake or reading food labels.

🔬 Chemistry & Laboratory Science

Laboratory measurements, chemical reagents, and sample weights in chemistry and biology are often expressed in milligrams for precision. When preparing solutions, a chemist might weigh 2.5 g = 2,500 mg of a compound, then dissolve it in a known volume of solvent. Converting between grams (scale readout) and milligrams (protocol specification) is a fundamental lab skill as of 2026.

🍳 Cooking & Baking

Precision cooking and baking — especially for spices, food additives, and specialty ingredients — often requires milligram-level accuracy. A recipe might call for 500 mg of saffron = 0.5 g, or 2,000 mg of baking powder = 2 g. Home bakers and professional chefs using digital scales frequently need to switch between grams and milligrams for accurate results.

💎 Jewellery & Gemstones

While jewellers typically use carats (1 carat = 0.2 g = 200 mg), milligrams are used for extremely fine measurements of precious metals and gemstone powder. Converting between grams and milligrams is essential when working with gold, silver, and precious stones at the sub-gram level, particularly in hallmarking, assaying, and gemological certification.

🎓 Education & Student Science

Students studying chemistry, biology, physics, and pharmacology routinely work with gram and milligram measurements in lab sessions and problem sets. Converting between these units is a core metric literacy skill taught from secondary school onwards. The relationship of 1 g = 1,000 mg is one of the first metric conversions students learn and one of the most frequently applied throughout their scientific education.

✅ Grams vs Milligrams at a Glance: 1 gram is always 1,000 times larger than 1 milligram. So a mass in grams will always give a smaller number than the same mass in milligrams. Conversely, milligrams converted to grams always give a smaller number — because grams are the larger unit. Example: 250 mg = 0.25 g (smaller number).

Grams and Milligrams — Key Facts

📖 Historical Note: The gram was originally defined in 1795 as the mass of one cubic centimetre of water at 4°C — a definition that linked mass directly to volume in the metric system. Today, the kilogram (and by extension the gram) is defined via the Planck constant under the 2019 revision of the SI system, making it the most precisely defined unit of mass in history. The milligram, as a decimal subdivision, has been part of the metric system since its inception and is universally used across medicine, science, and industry as of 2026.
  • 1 gram = 1,000 milligrams (exact)
  • 1 gram = 1,000,000 micrograms (µg)
  • 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams = 1,000,000 milligrams
  • 1 milligram = 0.001 grams = 0.000001 kilograms
  • 1 gram ≈ 0.03527 ounces (imperial)
  • A standard aspirin tablet: 500 mg = 0.5 g
  • A paperclip weighs approximately 1 gram = 1,000 mg
  • A US dollar bill weighs approximately 1 gram = 1,000 mg
  • The recommended daily sodium intake is approximately 2,300 mg = 2.3 g
  • A teaspoon of table salt weighs approximately 6 g = 6,000 mg
⚠️ Don't Confuse mg with mL: Milligrams (mg) measure mass/weight, while millilitres (mL) measure volume. They are equal only for water at standard conditions (1 mL of water = approximately 1 g = 1,000 mg). For other substances — like oil, honey, or medicine — 1 mL does not equal 1 mg. Always check whether a measurement refers to mass (mg/g) or volume (mL/L) to avoid dangerous dosage errors, especially in medicine.

Frequently Asked Questions — Grams to Milligrams

How many milligrams is 1 gram?
1 gram is exactly 1,000 milligrams. This is an exact metric relationship — not an approximation. The prefix "milli" means one thousandth (0.001), so 1 milligram = 0.001 grams, and conversely 1 gram = 1,000 milligrams. This relationship holds universally across all scientific, medical, and everyday applications.
How do I convert grams to milligrams?
To convert grams to milligrams, simply multiply the number of grams by 1,000. The formula is: milligrams = grams × 1,000. For example: 0.5 g × 1,000 = 500 mg. 2.5 g × 1,000 = 2,500 mg. 10 g × 1,000 = 10,000 mg. Alternatively, move the decimal point 3 places to the right. Use the converter at the top of this page for instant results.
How do I convert milligrams to grams?
To convert milligrams to grams, divide the number of milligrams by 1,000. The formula is: grams = milligrams ÷ 1,000. For example: 500 mg ÷ 1,000 = 0.5 g. 250 mg ÷ 1,000 = 0.25 g. 2,000 mg ÷ 1,000 = 2 g. Alternatively, move the decimal point 3 places to the left. This is the most common direction needed when reading medicine labels.
How many milligrams is 500 mg in grams?
500 milligrams equals 0.5 grams (500 ÷ 1,000 = 0.5). This is one of the most commonly needed conversions — a standard paracetamol or aspirin tablet is 500 mg, which is half a gram. In other terms, 500 mg = 0.5 g = 0.0005 kg = 500,000 micrograms (µg).
Is milligram bigger or smaller than a gram?
A milligram is much smaller than a gram. Specifically, 1 milligram = 0.001 grams — meaning a gram is 1,000 times larger than a milligram. In practical terms, 1 gram is about the weight of a paperclip, while 1 milligram is one thousandth of that — barely visible to the naked eye. This is why drug dosages and micronutrients are expressed in milligrams rather than grams.
How many milligrams in a kilogram?
There are exactly 1,000,000 (one million) milligrams in 1 kilogram. This is because 1 kg = 1,000 g, and 1 g = 1,000 mg, so 1,000 × 1,000 = 1,000,000 mg. The full metric chain is: 1 kg = 1,000 g = 1,000,000 mg = 1,000,000,000 µg (micrograms). This relationship is exact and is the same worldwide under the SI system.
Why are drug doses given in milligrams instead of grams?
Drug doses are expressed in milligrams because most active pharmaceutical ingredients are effective at very small quantities — fractions of a gram. Using milligrams allows for precise, readable numbers without awkward decimals. For example, a 500 mg dose is clearer and less error-prone to write than 0.5 g. Using milligrams also reduces the risk of dosing errors — a misplaced decimal in grams could mean a 10× or 100× overdose, while milligrams provide a safer, more explicit unit for clinical use.
How many grams is 1,000 mg?
1,000 milligrams is exactly 1 gram. This is the base conversion: 1,000 mg = 1 g. This commonly comes up with Vitamin C supplements — a "1,000 mg Vitamin C tablet" contains exactly 1 gram of ascorbic acid. Similarly, a "1,000 mg fish oil capsule" contains 1 gram of fish oil. Knowing that 1,000 mg = 1 g makes reading supplement labels straightforward.

Useful Resources & References

📏 BIPM — SI Units

The Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM) is the international body responsible for defining SI units including the gram and kilogram. Their resources cover official mass definitions and the 2019 SI revision that redefined the kilogram via the Planck constant.

Visit BIPM →

💊 WHO — Medicine Dosage

The World Health Organization (WHO) publishes international pharmaceutical standards where drug dosages and active ingredients are expressed in milligrams and grams. Their essential medicines list is a key reference for gram/milligram conversions in healthcare.

Visit WHO →

🇺🇸 NIST — Metric Units

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) provides authoritative guidance on metric units including grams and milligrams, and their relationship to US customary units — essential for science, industry, and trade.

Visit NIST →

🥗 USDA — Nutrition Data

The USDA FoodData Central database lists all nutritional values in grams and milligrams — making it an essential reference for anyone converting between these units in a dietary or food science context.

Visit USDA →