Bar to Torr Converter

Convert bars to torr with our free online pressure converter.

Quick Answer

1 Bar = 750.061683 torr

Formula: Bar × conversion factor = Torr

Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.

Our Accuracy Guarantee

All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.

Last verified: February 2026Reviewed by: Sam Mathew, Software Engineer

Bar to Torr Calculator

How to Use the Bar to Torr Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Bar).
  2. The converted value in Torr will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
  3. Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Pressure category.
  4. Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
Share:

How to Convert Bar to Torr: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Bar to Torr involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

Torr = bar × 750.062

Example Calculation:

1 bar = 750.061683 Torr

Disclaimer: For Reference Only

These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.

Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.

What is a Bar and a Torr?

and Standards

The bar is defined as:

Fundamental Definition

1 bar = 100,000 Pa (exactly) 1 bar = 100 kPa (exactly) 1 bar = 0.1 MPa (exactly)

In CGS units (historical): 1 bar = 10⁶ dynes/cm²

Why 100,000 Pascals?

The bar was deliberately chosen to create a practical, metric-friendly pressure unit that:

  • Approximates atmospheric pressure: 1 bar ≈ 1 atm (actual: 1.01325 bar = 1 atm)
  • Uses round numbers: 100,000 Pa = 100 kPa (easy mental math)
  • Bridges small and large pressures: Larger than Pa, smaller than MPa
  • Decimal relationship to SI: Exact powers of 10 conversion to Pa/kPa/MPa

Standard Conversions

  • 1 bar = 100,000 Pa (exactly)
  • 1 bar = 100 kPa (exactly)
  • 1 bar = 0.1 MPa (exactly)
  • 1 bar = 14.5038 PSI
  • 1 bar = 0.986923 atm
  • 1 bar = 1,000 mbar (millibars)
  • 1 bar = 10 dbar (decibars—oceanography)
  • 1 bar = 750.062 mmHg (Torr)
  • 1 bar = 29.53 inches Hg

Relationship to Standard Atmosphere

  • 1 atmosphere (atm) = 1.01325 bar (exactly)
  • 1 bar = 0.986923 atm
  • Difference: ~1.3%, small enough for many practical purposes to treat as equal

Millibar (mbar) — Meteorology Standard

1 millibar (mbar) = 0.001 bar = 100 Pa = 1 hectopascal (hPa)

Weather reports worldwide use millibars/hectopascals:

  • Standard sea-level pressure: 1,013.25 mbar = 1.01325 bar
  • Weather range: 980-1,050 mbar (0.98-1.05 bar)
  • Hurricane pressure: <920 mbar (<0.92 bar)

Note: Meteorologists now officially use hectopascals (hPa) instead of millibars, but they're numerically identical: 1 mbar = 1 hPa.

The Torr (symbol: Torr) is a unit of pressure based on an absolute scale. It is not an SI unit, but it is widely used in science and engineering.

The Modern Definition: 1 Torr is defined as exactly 1/760 of a standard atmosphere (1 atm).

Since a standard atmosphere is defined as exactly 101,325 Pascals (Pa), the exact value of one Torr is: 1 Torr = 101,325 / 760 Pascals ≈ 133.322368421 Pascals.

** Torr vs. mmHg**: Historically, the Torr was intended to be same as the millimeter of mercury (mmHg). However, because the density of mercury changes with temperature and local gravity varies across the Earth, the mmHg is not a "true" absolute unit. To solve this, the Torr was redefined as a fixed fraction of an atmosphere, making it a perfectly stable unit regardless of where or the temperature at which you measure it.

Key standard relationships:

  • 1 Torr = 1,000 milliTorr (mTorr)
  • 760 Torr = 1 standard atmosphere (atm)
  • 1 Torr ≈ 1.333 millibars (mbar)
  • 1 Torr ≈ 0.0193 PSI (pounds per square inch)

Note: The Bar is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Torr belongs to the imperial/US customary system.

History of the Bar and Torr

and Evolution

William Napier Shaw and the Bar's Creation (1909)

Sir William Napier Shaw (1854-1945) was a pioneering British meteorologist who revolutionized weather forecasting and atmospheric science. As Director of the British Meteorological Office (1905-1920), Shaw faced a practical problem: meteorologists, engineers, and scientists used wildly inconsistent pressure units, making international data sharing difficult.

The Problem (Pre-1909):

  • Meteorology: Inches of mercury (inHg) in UK/US, millimeters of mercury (mmHg) in Europe
  • Engineering: Pounds per square inch (PSI) in English-speaking countries
  • Science: Atmospheres (atm), technical atmospheres (at = 1 kgf/cm²), various CGS units
  • Result: Confusion, conversion errors, lack of standardization

Shaw's Solution: Create a metric pressure unit that:

  1. Approximates atmospheric pressure for intuitive meaning (1 bar ≈ 1 atm)
  2. Uses metric/decimal system for easy calculation
  3. Fits CGS and later SI frameworks with exact relationships
  4. Provides practical scale between very small Pa and large atm

Etymology: Shaw chose "bar" from Greek baros (βάρος = weight), the same root as:

  • Barometer (baros + metron = weight measurer)
  • Barograph (baros + graphein = weight recorder)
  • Isobar (isos + baros = equal weight/pressure)

Definition (1909): 1 bar = 10⁶ dynes/cm² (CGS units)

When SI units were adopted in 1960, this translated to: 1 bar = 10⁵ Pa = 100,000 Pa = 100 kPa

Millibar and Meteorology (1910s-1990s)

Rapid adoption: The millibar (mbar = 0.001 bar) became the dominant meteorological pressure unit by the 1920s-1930s, appearing on:

  • Weather maps (isobars labeled in mbar)
  • Barometer scales (replacing inches/mm Hg)
  • Aviation altimeter settings
  • Synoptic weather charts worldwide

Why millibar succeeded:

  • Sea-level pressure = 1,013 mbar (easy three-digit number)
  • Weather variations 980-1,050 mbar fit human-scale numbers
  • Metric decimal system simplified calculations
  • International meteorological cooperation adopted it as standard

Transition to Hectopascal (1990s): When SI units were fully standardized, meteorologists transitioned from "millibar" to "hectopascal" (hPa) terminology:

  • 1 mbar = 1 hPa (numerically identical)
  • Weather reports changed wording but not numbers: "1015 mbar" → "1015 hPa"
  • Many regions still colloquially use "millibar" despite official hPa standard

Industrial and Automotive Adoption (1950s-Present)

European Industrial Standardization (1950s-1970s):

  • Hydraulic systems: Bar replaced PSI in European manufacturing
  • Pneumatic tools: Compressed air specifications in bar (6-10 bar standard)
  • Pressure vessel codes: European standards (DIN, EN) used bar
  • Scuba diving: Bar became universal for tank pressure ratings (200-300 bar)

Automotive Tire Pressure (1960s-2000s):

  • European transition: Car manufacturers adopted bar for tire specifications
  • Practical numbers: Passenger car tires 2.0-2.5 bar (vs 29-36 PSI)
  • Sidewall labeling: Dual marking "32 PSI / 2.2 bar" became global standard
  • Current status: Europe, Asia, Middle East, Africa primarily use bar; US/UK still predominantly PSI

Global Engineering (1980s-Present):

  • ISO standards: Many use bar alongside MPa for hydraulic/pneumatic specifications
  • Material datasheets: Bar appears in pressure-temperature ratings
  • Commercial equipment: European/Asian machinery rated in bar

CIPM Recognition (1982)

The International Committee for Weights and Measures (CIPM) officially recognized the bar in 1982 as acceptable for use with the International System of Units (SI), despite not being an SI unit itself.

Reasoning:

  • Widespread industrial and commercial use made elimination impractical
  • Exact decimal relationship to SI (1 bar = 10⁵ Pa) ensured compatibility
  • No confusion with SI units due to distinct name and symbol
  • Valuable for expressing pressures in human-scale numbers (tire: 2.2 bar vs 220,000 Pa)

Status Today:

  • Not SI, but SI-compatible: Bar allowed in contexts where practical
  • Scientific literature: Pascals preferred, bar acceptable for applied engineering
  • Industry standard: Bar dominates hydraulics, automotive, diving worldwide
  • Coexistence: Bar and PSI used alongside each other in international trade

: From the First Barometer to Modern Vacuums

The history of the Torr is the history of our understanding of the "void" and the air around us.

1. Evangelista Torricelli and the "Sea of Air" (1643)

Before the 1640s, scientists believed that "nature abhors a vacuum" and that space was always filled with something. Evangelista Torricelli, a student of Galileo, challenged this. He filled a glass tube with mercury and inverted it into a bowl. Instead of all the mercury flowing out, it stopped at a height of about 76 cm (760 mm).

Torricelli correctly deduced that it wasn't a "pull" from the vacuum at the top of the tube, but the weight of the atmosphere pushing down on the mercury in the bowl that held the liquid up. He famously stated: "We live submerged at the bottom of an ocean of elementary air."

2. The Birth of the Name (1913)

For centuries, pressure was simply measured in "inches of mercury" or "millimeters of mercury." In 1913, the unit was formally named the Torr to honor Torricelli.

3. The Great Redefinition (1954)

As science became more precise, the variance in mercury density became a problem (a "millimeter of mercury" in the Arctic was technically different from one at the Equator). In 1954, at the 10th General Conference on Weights and Measures, the Standard Atmosphere was fixed at exactly 101,325 Pascals. Consequently, the Torr was redefined as exactly 1/760 of that value, decoupling it from the physical properties of mercury forever.

Common Uses and Applications: bars vs torr

Explore the typical applications for both Bar (imperial/US) and Torr (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.

Common Uses for bars

Across Industries

Automotive and Transportation

  • Tire pressure specifications: Universal in Europe, Asia, Africa (2-2.5 bar typical cars)
  • Vehicle manuals: All European/Asian manufacturers specify bar
  • Tire pressure monitoring systems (TPMS): Display in bar or PSI based on region
  • Service station air pumps: Labeled in bar throughout Europe/Asia

Industrial Manufacturing

  • Hydraulic machinery: European/Asian equipment rated in bar (excavators, presses)
  • Pneumatic systems: Compressed air specifications worldwide (6-10 bar standard)
  • Process equipment: Pressure ratings in bar (reactors, heat exchangers, distillation)
  • Quality control: Pressure testing specifications in bar

Scuba Diving and Water Sports

  • Universal diving standard: Tank pressures worldwide rated in bar (200-300 bar)
  • Dive computers: Display depth pressure in bar
  • Dive tables: Pressure calculations in bar
  • Compressor stations: Fill pressures specified in bar

Meteorology and Aviation

  • Weather reports: Atmospheric pressure in millibars (mbar) or hectopascals (hPa)
  • Weather maps: Isobars (lines of equal pressure) labeled in mbar
  • Altimeter settings: Some regions use hectopascals (1 hPa = 1 mbar = 0.001 bar)
  • Barometers: Scales often include bar/mbar markings

Medical and Healthcare

  • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy: Chamber pressures 2-3 bar absolute (2-3 ATA)
  • Respiratory equipment: Some ventilators display pressure in mbar
  • Autoclaves: Sterilization at 2.0-2.2 bar, 121-134°C
  • Medical gas cylinders: Oxygen/air tanks rated in bar

Energy and Utilities

  • Natural gas distribution: Pipeline pressures in bar (5-100 bar)
  • Steam systems: Boiler and turbine pressures in bar
  • Hydrogen infrastructure: Fuel cell vehicle tanks 350-700 bar
  • Compressed air energy storage: 40-80 bar in underground caverns

When to Use torr

Additional Unit Information

About Bar (bar)

What exactly is one bar?

One bar = 100,000 pascals (Pa) = 100 kilopascals (kPa).

Physical interpretation:

  • One bar approximately equals atmospheric pressure at sea level (actual: 1.013 bar)
  • One bar = pressure from a 10-meter (33-foot) column of water
  • One bar = 10 newtons of force distributed over 1 cm² (10 N/cm²)

Why it's practical: The bar bridges the gap between the very small pascal (101,325 Pa for atmospheric pressure) and the non-metric atmosphere/PSI. Tire pressure of 2.2 bar is easier to remember and communicate than 220,000 Pa or 220 kPa.

How do I convert bar to PSI?

Formula: PSI = bar × 14.5038

Step-by-step example (2.2 bar to PSI):

  1. 2.2 bar × 14.5038 = 31.9 PSI
  2. Or use approximation: 2.2 bar × 14.5 ≈ 32 PSI

Quick approximation: Multiply bar by 15 for rough PSI (slightly high)

  • 2 bar × 15 = 30 PSI (exact: 29.0 PSI)
  • 2.5 bar × 15 = 37.5 PSI (exact: 36.3 PSI)

Common conversions:

  • 1.0 bar = 14.5 PSI
  • 2.0 bar = 29.0 PSI (bicycle/motorcycle tire)
  • 2.2 bar = 32.0 PSI (typical car tire)
  • 2.5 bar = 36.3 PSI (SUV tire)
  • 10 bar = 145 PSI (compressed air)
  • 200 bar = 2,900 PSI (scuba tank)

Bar to PSI converter →

How many bar is standard atmospheric pressure?

Standard atmospheric pressure = 1.01325 bar (exactly = 1 atmosphere)

Rounded: Often approximated as 1 bar for practical purposes (1.3% difference).

Weather variations:

  • High pressure system: 1.020-1.060 bar (clear weather)
  • Normal range: 1.000-1.020 bar
  • Low pressure system: 0.980-1.000 bar (rain/clouds)
  • Tropical storm: 0.950-0.980 bar
  • Hurricane: <0.920 bar (severe storm)

Altitude variations:

  • Sea level: 1.013 bar
  • 1,000 m (3,280 ft): 0.900 bar
  • Denver (1,600 m, 5,280 ft): 0.830 bar
  • Mount Everest (8,849 m): 0.337 bar (1/3 sea level)

What is 2.5 bar in PSI?

2.5 bar = 36.3 PSI

Typical uses:

  • SUV tires (loaded): 2.4-2.6 bar (35-38 PSI)
  • Van/minivan tires: 2.5-2.8 bar (36-40 PSI)
  • High-performance car tires: 2.5-3.0 bar (36-44 PSI)
  • Light truck tires (front): 2.5-2.8 bar (36-40 PSI)
  • Sports car (Porsche, BMW M): 2.5-3.0 bar (36-44 PSI)

Temperature note: Tire pressure increases ~0.1 bar when hot, so 2.5 bar cold may read 2.6-2.7 bar after highway driving.

Bar to PSI converter →

How do I convert bar to kPa?

Formula: kPa = bar × 100 (exactly—easiest conversion!)

Examples:

  • 1 bar = 100 kPa
  • 2 bar = 200 kPa
  • 2.2 bar = 220 kPa (car tire)
  • 10 bar = 1,000 kPa = 1 MPa
  • 200 bar = 20,000 kPa = 20 MPa (scuba tank)

Mental math: Just multiply by 100 (add two zeros or move decimal point two places right).

Why this matters: International tire pressure specifications increasingly use kPa instead of bar or PSI. Same number, different unit: 220 kPa = 2.2 bar = 32 PSI.

Bar to kPa converter →

Why does Europe use bar and USA use PSI?

Historical reasons:

Europe/Asia → Bar:

  • Metric system adoption: Bar fits decimal metric framework (1 bar = 100 kPa)
  • SI-compatible: Exact relationship to pascal (1 bar = 10⁵ Pa)
  • Intuitive scale: 1 bar ≈ atmospheric pressure, car tires 2-2.5 bar
  • International cooperation: European standardization post-WWII promoted bar
  • Current status: Dominant in Europe, Asia, Middle East, Africa, South America

USA/UK → PSI:

  • Imperial system tradition: Pounds per square inch predates metric system
  • Industrial legacy: Existing tools, gauges, training, documentation all in PSI
  • Market size: US automotive/aerospace industry maintained PSI standards
  • Cost of conversion: Retooling factories, retraining workforce expensive
  • Current status: US predominantly PSI, UK transitioning to bar

Modern reality:

  • Dual labeling: Tire sidewalls worldwide show both "32 PSI / 2.2 bar"
  • Conversion apps: Smartphones make unit conversion trivial
  • Professional equipment: High-end gauges display both units simultaneously
  • Globalization: Engineers routinely work with both bar and PSI

What's the difference between bar and millibar?

Bar = 100,000 Pa = 100 kPa (industrial/engineering standard)

Millibar (mbar) = 0.001 bar = 100 Pa = 1 hectopascal (hPa) (meteorology standard)

Relationship: 1 bar = 1,000 mbar

Usage:

  • Bar: Tire pressure (2.2 bar), hydraulics (200 bar), scuba tanks (300 bar)
  • Millibar: Weather reports (1013 mbar), atmospheric pressure, aviation

Why different scales:

  • Millibar provides human-scale numbers for weather: 980-1050 mbar range
  • Bar avoids decimals for engineering: 2.2 bar tire vs 2,200 mbar (awkward)

Modern terminology: Meteorologists now use hectopascal (hPa) instead of millibar, but they're numerically identical:

  • 1 mbar = 1 hPa (same number, SI vs non-SI name)
  • "Pressure is 1015 mbar" = "Pressure is 1015 hPa"

Can I use bar for scientific research?

Generally no—use pascals (Pa/kPa/MPa) for scientific work.

Reasoning:

  • SI standard: Pascal is the official SI unit of pressure
  • Scientific journals: Require SI units for consistency and international comparability
  • Peer review: Reviewers expect Pa/kPa/MPa in research papers
  • Data archiving: Long-term data should use SI for future accessibility

Exceptions where bar is acceptable:

  • Applied engineering research: Industrial collaborations, pressure vessel studies
  • Geophysics/oceanography: Some fields traditionally use bar/decibar
  • Historical comparisons: Citing older literature that used bar
  • Supplementary notation: Can include bar in parentheses after SI value: "100 kPa (1 bar)"

Best practice:

  • Report in SI (Pa/kPa/MPa) as primary unit
  • Mention bar equivalents if relevant to application
  • Follow journal guidelines: Check specific requirements before submission

How does pressure change with depth underwater?

Rule: Pressure increases 1 bar per 10 meters (33 feet) of depth.

Depth-pressure relationship:

  • Surface: 1 bar (atmospheric pressure)
  • 10 m (33 ft): 2 bar absolute (1 bar water + 1 bar atmosphere)
  • 20 m (66 ft): 3 bar absolute
  • 30 m (98 ft): 4 bar absolute—recreational diving limit
  • 40 m (130 ft): 5 bar absolute—advanced open water limit
  • 50 m (164 ft): 6 bar absolute
  • 100 m (328 ft): 11 bar absolute—technical/commercial diving
  • 200 m (656 ft): 21 bar absolute

Why it matters for diving:

  • Air consumption: At 30 m (4 bar), diver breathes air 4× faster than surface
  • Nitrogen absorption: Higher pressure = more nitrogen dissolves in blood/tissues
  • Decompression requirements: Deeper/longer dives need staged ascent to avoid "bends"
  • Regulator design: Delivers breathing gas at ambient pressure (2 bar at 10 m)

Formula: Pressure (bar absolute) = (Depth in meters ÷ 10) + 1

What pressure is a scuba tank filled to?

Standard scuba tank pressures:

Aluminum tanks (common in US/recreational diving):

  • Aluminum 80 cu ft: 207 bar (3,000 PSI) when full
  • Usable down to 50 bar (725 PSI) reserve

Steel tanks (common in Europe/technical diving):

  • Steel 12L (European): 232 bar (3,365 PSI) standard, up to 300 bar (4,350 PSI) high-pressure
  • Steel 100 cu ft (US): 237 bar (3,442 PSI)

Why such high pressure:

  • Compact storage: More air fits in smaller volume at high pressure
  • Extended dive time: Higher capacity = longer bottom time
  • Safety margin: Start with 200-300 bar, surface with 50+ bar reserve

Tank safety:

  • Hydrostatic testing: Every 5 years at 1.5× working pressure (300-450 bar)
  • Visual inspection: Annual checks for corrosion, damage
  • Burst disk: Releases at ~1.25× working pressure to prevent catastrophic failure

How do I measure pressure in bar?

Pressure measurement devices:

1. Tire Pressure Gauges:

  • Dial gauge: Mechanical, reads in bar and/or PSI (accuracy ±0.1 bar)
  • Digital gauge: LCD display, selectable units (accuracy ±0.05 bar)
  • Pencil gauge: Simple, cheap, less accurate (±0.2 bar)
  • Tire shops: Calibrated gauges (±0.03 bar)

2. Industrial Pressure Gauges:

  • Bourdon tube gauge: Most common, 40-400 mm dial, ranges 0-1 to 0-1000+ bar
  • Dial markings: Often dual-scale (bar outer ring, PSI inner ring)
  • Accuracy classes: 0.6%, 1.0%, 1.6%, 2.5% of full scale

3. Digital Pressure Transducers:

  • Electronic sensors: Piezoresistive, strain gauge, capacitive types
  • Output: 4-20 mA current loop or 0-10V voltage proportional to pressure
  • Display: Digital readout in user-selected units (bar, PSI, kPa, MPa)
  • Accuracy: ±0.1% to ±0.5% full scale

4. Manometers (for low pressures):

  • U-tube manometer: Water or mercury column (measures in mm H₂O or mm Hg, convert to bar)
  • Digital manometer: Electronic, displays in bar, kPa, PSI, mbar

5. Barometers (atmospheric pressure):

  • Aneroid barometer: Mechanical, often labeled in mbar and/or inHg
  • Electronic barometer: Digital, weather stations, smartphones (MEMS sensor)

Calibration: Professional gauges calibrated against reference standards traceable to national metrology labs (NIST, PTB).

Is bar the same as barometric pressure?

No—they're related but different concepts:

Bar (unit):

  • A unit of measurement for pressure
  • 1 bar = 100,000 Pa = 100 kPa
  • Can measure any type of pressure (tire, hydraulic, atmospheric, etc.)

Barometric pressure (measurement):

  • The atmospheric pressure at a given location
  • Measured and reported in various units: bar, mbar, hPa, mmHg, inHg, PSI
  • Changes with weather and altitude
  • Standard sea-level barometric pressure = 1.01325 bar = 1,013.25 mbar

Etymology connection:

  • Both "bar" and "barometer" derive from Greek baros (βάρος) = weight
  • Barometer = baros (weight) + metron (measure) = instrument measuring atmospheric weight/pressure
  • William Napier Shaw chose "bar" to complement "barometer" terminology

Usage:

  • "The barometric pressure is 1.015 bar" ✓ (atmospheric pressure measured in bar units)
  • "The tire pressure is 2.2 bar" ✓ (tire pressure measured in bar units)
  • Barometric pressure is just one type of pressure that can be expressed in bar

About Torr (Torr)

What is the difference between Torr and mmHg?

For almost all practical, medical, and industrial purposes, they are the same. However, scientifically:

  • Torr is defined as exactly 1/760 of a Standard Atmosphere (Standardized in 1954).
  • mmHg (millimeter of mercury) is based on the actual weight of liquid mercury, which changes slightly depending on gravity and temperature.
  • The difference is 1 part in 7 million. Unless you are building a particle accelerator, you can treat them as identical.

Why is Torr used in vacuum technology?

Torr is the preferred unit because most vacuum systems are based on pumping down from atmospheric pressure. Since 760 Torr is a standard atmosphere, it's very easy for an engineer to know how "far" they have to go. It also uses a logarithmic scale naturally, making it easy to talk about 10⁻⁶ or 10⁻⁹ Torr levels.

Is a Torr a "Metric" unit?

No. The official SI unit for pressure is the Pascal (Pa). However, because 1 Pascal is such a small amount of pressure (about the weight of a dollar bill on a table), scientists in specific fields prefer the Torr for convenience.

How do you convert Torr to PSI?

Multiply your Torr value by 0.0193368. Formula: PSI = Torr × 0.0193368 Example: 100 Torr ≈ 1.93 PSI.

What is a "milliTorr" (mTorr)?

Also known as a Micron, a milliTorr is 1/1,000th of a Torr. It is commonly used in "roughing" vacuum pumps (like the one in your school's physics lab or a high-end food sealer).

Is 0 Torr possible?

A "perfect" vacuum (exactly 0 Torr) is theoretically impossible according to quantum mechanics. Even in deep intergalactic space, there is a pressure of about 10⁻¹⁷ Torr due to a few stray hydrogen atoms and cosmic radiation.

Is Torr used in the medical field?

Yes, but doctors almost always call it mmHg. When a nurse says your blood pressure is "120 over 80," they are literally saying "120 Torr systolic and 80 Torr diastolic."

Who is the unit Torr named after?

It is named after Evangelista Torricelli, the Italian physicist who proved that air has weight and invented the mercury barometer in 1643.

How many Pascals are in a Torr?

Exactly 133.322368... Pascals. For most calculations, using 133.3 is sufficient.

What happens if you are exposed to 0 Torr?

This is "space vacuum." Contrary to movies, your head doesn't explode. However, the oxygen in your blood would diffuse out of your lungs into the vacuum, causing you to lose consciousness in about 15 seconds. Your skin is tough enough to hold "you" together, but you would swell up significantly as water in your tissues starts to turn to gas.

Conversion Table: Bar to Torr

Bar (bar)Torr (Torr)
0.5375.031
1750.062
1.51,125.093
21,500.123
53,750.308
107,500.617
2518,751.542
5037,503.084
10075,006.168
250187,515.421
500375,030.841
1,000750,061.683

People Also Ask

How do I convert Bar to Torr?

To convert Bar to Torr, enter the value in Bar in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our pressure converter page to convert between other units in this category.

Learn more →

What is the conversion factor from Bar to Torr?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Bar and Torr. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.

Can I convert Torr back to Bar?

Yes! You can easily convert Torr back to Bar by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Torr to Bar converter page. You can also explore other pressure conversions on our category page.

Learn more →

What are common uses for Bar and Torr?

Bar and Torr are both standard units used in pressure measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our pressure converter for more conversion options.

For more pressure conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.

All Pressure Conversions

Pascal to KilopascalPascal to MegapascalPascal to HectopascalPascal to BarPascal to MillibarPascal to AtmospherePascal to Technical AtmospherePascal to TorrPascal to Millimeter of MercuryPascal to Inch of MercuryPascal to Pound per Square InchPascal to Kilopound per Square InchPascal to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterPascal to Kilogram-force per Square MeterPascal to Millimeter of Water ColumnPascal to Inch of Water ColumnKilopascal to PascalKilopascal to MegapascalKilopascal to HectopascalKilopascal to BarKilopascal to MillibarKilopascal to AtmosphereKilopascal to Technical AtmosphereKilopascal to TorrKilopascal to Millimeter of MercuryKilopascal to Inch of MercuryKilopascal to Pound per Square InchKilopascal to Kilopound per Square InchKilopascal to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterKilopascal to Kilogram-force per Square MeterKilopascal to Millimeter of Water ColumnKilopascal to Inch of Water ColumnMegapascal to PascalMegapascal to KilopascalMegapascal to HectopascalMegapascal to BarMegapascal to MillibarMegapascal to AtmosphereMegapascal to Technical AtmosphereMegapascal to TorrMegapascal to Millimeter of MercuryMegapascal to Inch of MercuryMegapascal to Pound per Square InchMegapascal to Kilopound per Square InchMegapascal to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterMegapascal to Kilogram-force per Square MeterMegapascal to Millimeter of Water ColumnMegapascal to Inch of Water ColumnHectopascal to PascalHectopascal to KilopascalHectopascal to MegapascalHectopascal to BarHectopascal to MillibarHectopascal to AtmosphereHectopascal to Technical AtmosphereHectopascal to TorrHectopascal to Millimeter of MercuryHectopascal to Inch of MercuryHectopascal to Pound per Square InchHectopascal to Kilopound per Square InchHectopascal to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterHectopascal to Kilogram-force per Square MeterHectopascal to Millimeter of Water ColumnHectopascal to Inch of Water ColumnBar to PascalBar to KilopascalBar to MegapascalBar to HectopascalBar to MillibarBar to AtmosphereBar to Technical AtmosphereBar to Millimeter of MercuryBar to Inch of MercuryBar to Pound per Square InchBar to Kilopound per Square InchBar to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterBar to Kilogram-force per Square MeterBar to Millimeter of Water ColumnBar to Inch of Water ColumnMillibar to PascalMillibar to KilopascalMillibar to MegapascalMillibar to HectopascalMillibar to BarMillibar to AtmosphereMillibar to Technical AtmosphereMillibar to TorrMillibar to Millimeter of MercuryMillibar to Inch of MercuryMillibar to Pound per Square InchMillibar to Kilopound per Square InchMillibar to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterMillibar to Kilogram-force per Square MeterMillibar to Millimeter of Water ColumnMillibar to Inch of Water ColumnAtmosphere to PascalAtmosphere to KilopascalAtmosphere to MegapascalAtmosphere to HectopascalAtmosphere to BarAtmosphere to MillibarAtmosphere to Technical AtmosphereAtmosphere to TorrAtmosphere to Millimeter of MercuryAtmosphere to Inch of MercuryAtmosphere to Pound per Square InchAtmosphere to Kilopound per Square InchAtmosphere to Kilogram-force per Square CentimeterAtmosphere to Kilogram-force per Square MeterAtmosphere to Millimeter of Water ColumnAtmosphere to Inch of Water ColumnTechnical Atmosphere to PascalTechnical Atmosphere to KilopascalTechnical Atmosphere to MegapascalTechnical Atmosphere to HectopascalTechnical Atmosphere to BarTechnical Atmosphere to MillibarTechnical Atmosphere to AtmosphereTechnical Atmosphere to TorrTechnical Atmosphere to Millimeter of Mercury

Verified Against Authority Standards

All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.

NIST Reference on Constants, Units and Uncertainty

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyFundamental physical constants and unit conversions

BIPM SI Units

Bureau International des Poids et MesuresInternational System of Units (SI) definitions and standards

ISO 80000

International Organization for StandardizationQuantities and units international standards series

Last verified: February 19, 2026