Pint (US) to Cup Converter

Convert US pints to cups with our free online volume converter.

Quick Answer

1 Pint (US) = 2 cups

Formula: Pint (US) × conversion factor = Cup

Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.

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

Pint (US) to Cup Calculator

How to Use the Pint (US) to Cup Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Pint (US)).
  2. The converted value in Cup will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
  3. Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Volume category.
  4. Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
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How to Convert Pint (US) to Cup: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Pint (US) to Cup involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

1 Pint (US) = 2 cups

Example Calculation:

Convert 10 US pints: 10 × 2 = 20 cups

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 Pint (US) and a Cup?

What Is a US Liquid Pint?

The US liquid pint is a unit of volume in the United States customary measurement system, defined as:

  • Exactly 16 US fluid ounces
  • Exactly 2 US cups
  • Exactly one-half (1/2) of a US quart
  • Exactly one-eighth (1/8) of a US gallon
  • Exactly 28.875 cubic inches
  • Exactly 473.176473 milliliters (by definition from 1959 international agreement)

The US liquid pint is the standard unit for serving beer in American bars, packaging milk and ice cream in grocery stores, and measuring moderate liquid quantities in recipes.

US Pint vs. Metric: Key Comparison

US Pint:

  • 473.176 milliliters (about 473 mL)
  • 0.473 liters (just under half a liter)
  • Used primarily in United States
  • Based on 1707 wine gallon (231 cubic inches)

Half Liter (500 mL):

  • 500 milliliters (exactly)
  • 1.057 US pints (about 6% larger)
  • Global metric standard
  • Used worldwide outside US/UK

Visual comparison:

  • A US pint is about 27 mL smaller than half a liter (500 mL)
  • 500 mL17 fl oz (slightly more than a US pint)
  • Many European "pint" beer glasses are actually 500 mL, not true pints

US Liquid Pint vs. US Dry Pint

The United States has two different pints:

US Liquid Pint:

  • 473.176 mL
  • Used for liquids (water, milk, beer, oil)
  • 1/8 of US liquid gallon
  • Standard for beverages and cooking

US Dry Pint:

  • 550.610 mL (about 16% larger)
  • Used historically for dry goods (berries, produce)
  • 1/8 of US dry gallon
  • Rarely used today

When it matters: If you buy a pint of strawberries or blueberries at a farmers market, the container might technically be a dry pint (550 mL), which is larger than a liquid pint. In practice, most commercial packaging uses liquid pint measurements or simply lists volume in fluid ounces.


The US Customary Cup

1 US Cup = 236.588237 milliliters (exactly)

This is defined as exactly 8 US fluid ounces.

Breakdown:

  • 1 cup = 8 fluid ounces
  • 1 cup = 16 tablespoons
  • 1 cup = 48 teaspoons
  • 1 cup = 1/2 pint
  • 1 cup = 1/4 quart
  • 1 cup = 1/16 gallon

The Metric Cup

1 Metric Cup = 250 milliliters (exactly)

Used in Australia, New Zealand, and Canada for recipes.

Why 250 mL?

  • Nice round number in the metric system.
  • Close to the US cup (only 5.7% larger).
  • Easy to work with (1/4 liter).

The Imperial Cup

1 Imperial Cup = 284.131 milliliters

Based on the imperial fluid ounce (10 imperial fl oz).

  • Rarely used today (UK now uses metric).
  • 20% larger than a US cup.

Dry vs. Liquid Cups

Important Distinction:

Liquid Measuring Cups:

  • Have a spout for pouring.
  • Marked below the rim (to prevent spilling).
  • Measured by filling to the line.

Dry Measuring Cups:

  • Flat rim (for leveling).
  • Filled to the brim and leveled with a knife.
  • More accurate for flour, sugar, etc.

Volume is the same (8 fl oz), but the measuring technique differs.

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

History of the Pint (US) and Cup

Etymology: From "Painted Mark" to Standard Measure

The word "pint" derives from the Old French word "pinte," which likely comes from the Latin "picta" meaning "painted" or "marked." This etymology refers to the historical practice of painting marks on the inside or outside of drinking vessels and storage containers to indicate specific volumes—the painted line showed exactly where liquid should reach to constitute one pint.

This practical origin reflects the medieval need for standardized trade measurements. Tavern keepers, merchants, and households needed a reliable way to measure and sell liquids like ale, wine, milk, and oil without expensive or complex measuring equipment.

English Origins: The Wine Gallon System (1707)

The US liquid pint traces its origins to the English wine gallon system established in 1707 during the reign of Queen Anne. The Wine Gallon Act defined the gallon as 231 cubic inches, creating a standard for wine trade throughout the British Empire.

Within this system:

  • 1 gallon = 231 cubic inches
  • 1 quart = 1/4 gallon = 57.75 cubic inches
  • 1 pint = 1/8 gallon = 28.875 cubic inches = 473.176 mL

This wine gallon system was used alongside the ale gallon (282 cubic inches, used for beer) and the corn gallon (268.8 cubic inches, used for grain), creating significant measurement confusion in colonial-era commerce.

American Independence and Measurement Continuity

When the United States gained independence in 1776, the young nation inherited British measurement systems. Unlike Britain, which would later reform its measurements, the United States retained the 1707 wine gallon standard and made it the foundation of American liquid measurement.

In 1832, the US Treasury Department officially standardized the US gallon at 231 cubic inches, making the US liquid pint exactly one-eighth of this gallon (28.875 cubic inches or 473.176 mL). This formalized what had been common practice in American trade and taverns since colonial times.

British Imperial Divergence (1824)

In 1824, Britain adopted the Imperial system under the Weights and Measures Act, creating a new, larger gallon based on 10 pounds of water at 62°F. This Imperial gallon measured 277.42 cubic inches, about 20% larger than the US gallon.

This change meant:

  • Imperial pint = 1/8 Imperial gallon = 568.261 mL
  • US liquid pint = 1/8 US gallon = 473.176 mL
  • Difference: The Imperial pint is 20% larger than the US pint

This divergence created permanent confusion for trade, travel, and recipes between the United States and Britain. When British cookbooks call for "a pint of milk," they mean 568 mL—significantly more than the 473 mL in an American pint.

Metric Definition (1959)

The 1959 International Yard and Pound Agreement between the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa refined measurement definitions in metric terms. The agreement established:

  • 1 inch = 25.4 millimeters (exactly)
  • 1 US gallon = 231 cubic inches = 3.785411784 liters (exactly)
  • 1 US pint = 1/8 gallon = 473.176473 milliliters (exactly)

This metric definition ended ambiguity about the pint's exact size in international scientific and trade contexts, though the US continued to use customary pint measurements in everyday commerce.

Modern Usage: Beer, Milk, and Ice Cream Standard

Today, the US liquid pint remains deeply embedded in American consumer culture, particularly in three major industries:

Beer Industry: American bars and breweries serve beer in pint glasses (16 fl oz), which has become the default "standard" serving size. Craft breweries often emphasize "pint" servings as a mark of value.

Dairy Industry: Milk has been sold in pint containers (16 fl oz) since the early 20th century, alongside quart and half-gallon sizes. School milk programs often use half-pint (8 oz) cartons.

Ice Cream Industry: Ice cream has been packaged in pint containers since at least the 1940s, with Ben & Jerry's popularizing the "pint" as an individual or couple's serving size starting in 1978.

The pint's survival in the metric age reflects its practical size—large enough for a satisfying beverage or dessert serving, but small enough to be consumed in one sitting.


: From Teacups to Standardization

Before 1896: Chaos in the Kitchen

Before standardization, recipes were vague:

  • "A teacup of flour" (but teacups varied in size!)
  • "A coffee cup of sugar" (different from a teacup!)
  • "A wine glass of milk" (which size glass?)

This led to inconsistent results. The same recipe could turn out differently every time.

Fannie Farmer's Revolution (1896)

Fannie Merritt Farmer, director of the Boston Cooking School, published the "Boston Cooking-School Cook Book" in 1896.

Her Innovation:

  • Standardized the cup to exactly 8 fluid ounces.
  • Introduced level measurements (level off with a knife).
  • Specified exact amounts (1 cup, 1/2 cup, 1/4 cup).

Impact:

  • Recipes became reproducible.
  • Home cooks could follow recipes with confidence.
  • The cup became the standard in American cooking.

The Metric Cup (1970s)

When Australia, New Zealand, and Canada adopted the metric system, they created the metric cup (250 mL).

Why not use the US cup?

  • 236.59 mL is an awkward number in metric.
  • 250 mL is a round number (1/4 liter).

Result:

  • US recipes use 236.59 mL cups.
  • Australian/NZ recipes use 250 mL cups.
  • Confusion when converting between systems!

Common Uses and Applications: US pints vs cups

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

Common Uses for US pints

1. Beer and Alcoholic Beverage Service

The US pint is synonymous with beer service in American drinking culture:

Bar and restaurant service:

  • Standard beer pour: 16 fl oz (1 pint) is the default serving size at most American bars
  • Draft beer: Served in pint glasses (shaker pint, nonic, tulip pint styles)
  • Craft breweries: Taproom pours typically offered in full pints or half-pints (8 oz)
  • Beer flights vs pints: Flights offer 4-5 small samples; pints are full-size servings
  • Pricing structure: Beer priced per pint, with happy hour "pint specials"

Glassware types:

  • Shaker pint (American pint): Straight-sided 16 oz glass, industry standard
  • Nonic pint: British-style with bulge near rim, holds 16 oz in US version
  • Imperial pint glass: 20 oz glass, used in British pubs
  • Tulip pint: Curved glass for Belgian/craft beers, 16 oz capacity

Consumer expectations: American drinkers expect a "pint" to mean 16 oz. Bars that serve less than a full pint (due to oversized glassware or short pours) face customer complaints and negative reviews.

2. Dairy Product Packaging

Milk and dairy products use the pint as a standard portion size:

Milk containers:

  • Individual/small household size: 1 pint (16 oz) for 1-2 people
  • School cafeteria: Half-pint (8 oz) single-serve cartons
  • Specialty milks: Oat, almond, soy, lactose-free often sold in pint sizes for trial/small households
  • Glass bottle milk: Premium/local dairies often use pint glass bottles
  • Chocolate milk: Convenience store bottled chocolate milk typically 16 oz (pint)

Cream products:

  • Heavy cream: Often sold in pint containers for cooking and whipping
  • Half-and-half: Larger pint containers for household use (beyond coffee pods)
  • Buttermilk: Pint and quart sizes for baking recipes

Historical context: The pint milk bottle was standard in home milk delivery (1900s-1960s), and school lunch programs standardized half-pint (8 oz) cartons in the mid-20th century.

3. Ice Cream and Frozen Dessert Packaging

The pint is the signature size for premium ice cream:

Why pints dominate premium ice cream:

  • Ben & Jerry's model: Pioneered premium pint packaging in 1978, making pints synonymous with high-quality ice cream
  • Personal treat sizing: Large enough to share or enjoy over 2-3 occasions, small enough to justify premium pricing
  • Flavor variety: Allows consumers to buy multiple flavors without committing to large containers
  • Portion psychology: Marketed as "individual indulgence" despite being 3-4 official servings

Industry standard:

  • 16 fl oz containers: Standard pint size across brands
  • Wide-mouth design: Pint containers have wide openings for easy scooping
  • Pint-sized packaging: Gelato, sorbet, non-dairy frozen desserts follow same format
  • "Pint" language: Brands use "pint" in marketing ("grab a pint," "pint club")

4. Recipe Measurements and Cooking

Liquid ingredients:

  • Stock/broth: Many recipes call for "1 pint chicken stock" (= 2 cups)
  • Heavy cream: "1 pint heavy cream" for sauces, soups, desserts
  • Milk: "1 pint milk" in bread, pancake, pudding recipes
  • Cooking conversions: 1 pint = 2 cups = 16 fl oz = ~475 mL

Baking and preserving:

  • Pint mason jars: Standard size for canning jams, jellies, pickles, salsa
  • Fruit preparation: "2 pints strawberries" (note: may mean dry pint for whole berries)
  • Measuring equipment: Some liquid measuring cups marked in pints (2-cup line)

Historical recipes: Older American cookbooks frequently use pints rather than cups, reflecting early 20th-century measurement conventions.

5. Beverage Retail Beyond Beer

Convenience store drinks:

  • Cold brew coffee: Bottled cold brew often 16 oz (pint)
  • Kombucha: Glass bottles commonly 16 oz
  • Fresh juice: Premium fresh-squeezed juice in pint bottles
  • Smoothies: Medium or regular smoothie size often 16 oz
  • Energy drinks: Some brands offer 16 oz "tall boy" cans

Restaurant beverages:

  • Soft drink sizing: "Medium" or "regular" often corresponds to ~16 oz (pint)
  • Iced tea/lemonade: Standard restaurant glasses often pint-sized
  • To-go cups: Many disposable cups come in 16 oz (pint) size

6. Food Storage and Meal Prep

Home food storage:

  • Pint mason jars: Used for storing leftovers, dry goods, overnight oats, salads
  • Portion control: Pint containers ideal for individual meal portions
  • Freezer storage: Pint-sized containers for freezing soups, sauces, stocks
  • Dry goods: Storing spices, grains, beans in pint jars for pantry organization

Meal prep industry:

  • Individual portions: Meal prep companies often use pint-sized containers
  • Soup/stew portions: Single-serving soup containers typically pint-sized
  • Smoothie prep: Pre-portioned smoothie ingredients frozen in pint containers

7. Scientific and Laboratory Measurements

Less common but still used:

  • US customary in labs: Some American labs still use pint measurements for non-critical applications
  • Agricultural applications: Liquid fertilizers, pesticides sometimes measured in pints/quarts/gallons
  • Automotive fluids: Motor oil sold in quarts, but pint measurements used in some maintenance contexts
  • Historical data: Older scientific literature may reference pints, requiring conversion to metric

Modern trend: Scientific contexts increasingly use metric (milliliters, liters) exclusively, with pints reserved for consumer and commercial applications.

8. Farmers Markets and Fresh Produce Sales

Produce containers:

  • Berry sales: Strawberries, blueberries, raspberries sold in pint containers (often dry pints = 550 mL)
  • Cherry tomatoes: Small tomatoes in pint containers
  • Fresh herbs: Large herb bunches sometimes sold by the pint
  • Prepared foods: Fresh salsas, dips, salads sold in pint containers

Dry vs liquid pint confusion: Technically, produce should be measured in dry pints (550 mL), but labeling is inconsistent. Some vendors use "pint" loosely to mean "small container" rather than precise measurement.


When to Use cups

1. Baking

The cup is essential for American baking recipes.

Standard Measurements:

  • Flour: 1-3 cups (depending on recipe)
  • Sugar: 1/2 - 2 cups
  • Butter: 1/2 - 1 cup (1-2 sticks)
  • Milk: 1/2 - 1 cup

Precision Matters:

  • Too much flour: Dry, dense baked goods.
  • Too little flour: Flat, soggy results.
  • Solution: Spoon flour into cup, level off (don't scoop and pack).

2. Cooking

Liquids:

  • Water, broth, milk: Easy to measure in cups.
  • Oil: 1/4 - 1/2 cup for sautéing.

Grains:

  • Rice: 1 cup uncooked = 3 cups cooked.
  • Pasta: 2 cups uncooked = 4 cups cooked.

Vegetables:

  • Chopped vegetables: 1-2 cups (onions, peppers, etc.).

3. Nutrition & Serving Sizes

USDA Serving Sizes:

  • Cooked Rice: 1 cup = 1 serving.
  • Pasta: 1 cup cooked = 1 serving.
  • Vegetables: 1 cup raw = 1 serving.
  • Milk: 1 cup = 1 serving (8 oz).
  • Cereal: 1 cup = 1 serving (varies by type).

4. Coffee & Beverages

Coffee Brewing:

  • Standard Ratio: 1-2 tablespoons coffee per 1 cup (6 oz) water.
  • Note: A "cup" of coffee is often 6 oz, not 8 oz!

Tea:

  • 1 cup water (8 oz) per tea bag.

Additional Unit Information

About Pint (US) (pt)

How many fluid ounces are in a US liquid pint?

There are exactly 16 US fluid ounces (fl oz) in 1 US liquid pint. This is a defining relationship: the pint is defined as 16 fl oz, which equals 473.176 milliliters.

Quick conversion:

  • 1 pint = 16 fl oz
  • 2 pints = 32 fl oz = 1 quart
  • 0.5 pint = 8 fl oz = 1 cup

How many cups are in a US liquid pint?

There are exactly 2 US cups in 1 US liquid pint. This is a standard cooking conversion.

Quick conversion:

  • 1 pint = 2 cups
  • 2 pints = 4 cups = 1 quart
  • 0.5 pint = 1 cup = 8 fl oz

Practical use: If a recipe calls for "1 pint heavy cream," you can measure out 2 cups instead.

Is a US liquid pint the same as a UK Imperial pint?

No. The US liquid pint is about 20% smaller than the UK Imperial pint:

  • US pint: 473.176 mL (16 US fl oz)
  • Imperial pint: 568.261 mL (20 Imperial fl oz)
  • Difference: 95 mL (about 3.2 fl oz more in Imperial pint)

Why it matters:

  • British beer: A pint in a UK pub is 568 mL—significantly more than a US bar pint
  • British recipes: "1 pint milk" in a British cookbook means 568 mL, not 473 mL
  • Canadian beer: Draft beer in Canada is served in Imperial pints (568 mL)

Conversion: 1 Imperial pint = 1.201 US pints2.4 US cups

How do you convert pints to liters?

To convert US pints to liters, multiply by 0.473176 (or approximately 0.47):

Formula:

Liters = Pints × 0.473176

Examples:

  • 1 pint = 0.473 L (about half a liter, but slightly less)
  • 2 pints = 0.946 L (just under 1 liter)
  • 4 pints = 1.893 L (just under 2 liters)

Reverse conversion (liters to pints):

Pints = Liters × 2.11338
  • 1 liter2.11 pints (slightly more than 2 pints)
  • 500 mL (0.5 L) ≈ 1.06 pints (slightly more than 1 pint)

Why is American beer served in pints?

The pint of beer became the standard American bar serving for several historical and practical reasons:

Historical reasons:

  • British tradition: English pubs traditionally served beer in Imperial pints (20 oz); American bars adapted this to US pints (16 oz) after independence
  • Pre-Prohibition norms: Saloons and taverns used pint-sized glasses as standard serves before Prohibition (1920-1933)
  • Post-Prohibition standardization: When legal drinking resumed in 1933, the 16 oz pint glass became industry standard

Practical reasons:

  • Perfect drinking size: 16 oz is large enough to satisfy but small enough to finish before beer warms or goes flat
  • Glassware standardization: Pint glasses (shaker pints, nonic pints) are cheap, stackable, versatile, and easy to clean
  • Pricing simplicity: "Price per pint" provides clear, comparable pricing across bars and beers
  • Cultural norm: Americans expect draft beer in pint glasses; smaller sizes feel like "short pours"

Modern craft beer: Craft breweries often offer half-pint (8 oz) "shorty" pours for high-ABV beers or taster flights alongside standard pint pours.

What is a dry pint, and how is it different from a liquid pint?

The US dry pint is a less common unit used historically for measuring dry goods, particularly agricultural products:

US Dry Pint:

  • 550.610 milliliters (about 550 mL)
  • 16.4% larger than the US liquid pint
  • 1/8 of the US dry gallon (268.8 cubic inches)
  • Used for: berries, produce, grains (historically)

US Liquid Pint:

  • 473.176 milliliters (about 473 mL)
  • Standard pint for beverages and cooking
  • 1/8 of the US liquid gallon (231 cubic inches)
  • Used for: water, milk, beer, oil, juice

Difference: The dry pint is 77 mL larger than the liquid pint (about 1/3 cup difference).

Modern usage: The dry pint is rarely used today. When you see "pint of strawberries" at a farmers market, the container may technically be a dry pint (550 mL), but most people just think of it as "a pint container." In practice, nearly all "pint" references mean the liquid pint (473 mL).

How many pints are in a gallon?

There are exactly 8 US pints in 1 US gallon:

Gallon breakdown:

  • 1 gallon = 8 pints = 4 quarts = 16 cups = 128 fl oz
  • 0.5 gallon = 4 pints = 2 quarts = 8 cups = 64 fl oz
  • 0.25 gallon = 2 pints = 1 quart = 4 cups = 32 fl oz

Reverse conversion:

  • 1 pint = 1/8 gallon = 0.125 gallon
  • 2 pints = 1/4 gallon = 0.25 gallon
  • 4 pints = 1/2 gallon = 0.5 gallon

Practical use: If you need 2 gallons of liquid, that's 16 pints or 8 quarts.

Is a pint of ice cream really a pint?

Yes—by volume. Ice cream pint containers hold 16 fluid ounces (473 mL) by volume, which is exactly 1 US liquid pint.

However:

  • Weight varies: A pint of ice cream does not weigh 16 oz. Depending on density (air content, ingredients), a pint of ice cream typically weighs 9-14 oz.
  • Premium vs regular: Premium ice cream (Ben & Jerry's, Häagen-Dazs) is denser (less air), so a pint weighs more (~11-14 oz). Regular ice cream has more air ("overrun"), so a pint weighs less (~9-11 oz).
  • Serving size deception: The FDA considers a pint of ice cream to be 4 servings (1/2 cup each), but most people consume 1-2 pints as 1-2 servings in practice.

Bottom line: The container holds exactly 1 liquid pint (16 fl oz) by volume, but the weight of the ice cream inside depends on its density.

Why are milk cartons sold in pints and quarts instead of liters?

Milk is sold in pints, quarts, half-gallons, and gallons in the United States because the dairy industry standardized these sizes in the early 20th century before metric adoption efforts:

Historical reasons:

  • Early 1900s milk delivery: Home milk delivery used glass bottles in pint, quart, and half-gallon sizes, which became consumer expectations
  • School lunch programs: The USDA standardized half-pint (8 oz) milk cartons for school cafeterias in the 1930s-1950s
  • Consumer familiarity: Generations of Americans grew up with these sizes, making them culturally ingrained
  • Existing infrastructure: Dairy plants, bottling equipment, and distribution systems built around these sizes

Why not liters:

  • US resistance to metrication: Unlike most countries, the US never fully adopted the metric system for consumer products
  • Lack of legal mandate: The 1975 Metric Conversion Act was voluntary, and dairy industry didn't switch
  • Consumer confusion: Switching to liters would require re-educating consumers about portion sizes

Modern trend: Some specialty/imported milks are sold in liter containers, but mainstream dairy remains in customary units (pints, quarts, half-gallons, gallons).

Can you use a pint measurement for both liquids and solids?

It depends:

For liquids: Yes, the US liquid pint (473 mL) is the correct measurement for all liquids—water, milk, oil, juice, etc.

For solids:

  • Dry pint (rarely used): The US dry pint (551 mL) was historically used for dry goods like berries, grains, and produce, but is uncommon today.
  • Modern practice: Most "solid" products measured in pints (berries, tomatoes, ice cream) actually use liquid pint measurements (473 mL / 16 fl oz) or simply use "pint" as a container size without strict adherence to either definition.
  • Weight vs volume: For solids, weight (ounces, pounds) is generally more accurate than volume (pints).

Practical advice:

  • Liquids: Always use liquid pint (473 mL = 16 fl oz)
  • Ice cream: Use liquid pint (16 fl oz containers)
  • Berries/produce: Container labeled "pint" may be dry pint (551 mL), liquid pint (473 mL), or approximation—check weight for precision
  • Cooking: Unless recipe specifies "dry pint," assume liquid pint

How do bartenders ensure a full pint pour?

Bartenders use several methods to serve accurate pint measurements:

Glassware standards:

  • 16 oz pint glasses: True pint glasses hold exactly 16 fl oz when filled to the rim
  • Fill lines: Some jurisdictions require glasses with etched fill lines showing exactly 16 oz
  • Honest Pint Project: Movement in US cities (Portland, Seattle) to certify bars serving true 16 oz pours

Pouring techniques:

  • Tilted glass: Pour beer at 45° angle to reduce foam, then straighten to fill
  • Headspace: Proper pour leaves 0.5-1 inch of foam (head), with ~14-15 oz liquid, totaling ~16 oz
  • Topped off: Some bartenders "top off" the glass after foam settles to ensure full measure

Legal requirements:

  • Weights and Measures: Some states require bars to serve advertised quantities accurately (e.g., "pint" must be 16 oz)
  • Inspections: Some jurisdictions inspect bars to ensure accurate pours
  • "Honest Pint" laws: Cities like Portland require fill lines or 16 oz minimum liquid

Consumer awareness:

  • Ask questions: If a "pint" looks short, ask bartender if it's a full 16 oz
  • Check glassware: Look for fill line markings or capacity stamps on bottom of glass
  • "Shaker pint" issues: Standard shaker pints hold exactly 16 oz, but some bars use oversized glasses to make smaller pours look full

About Cup (cup)

Is a cup the same everywhere?

No! There are three main types:

US Customary Cup: 236.59 mL (8 US fl oz)

  • Used in: United States

Metric Cup: 250 mL

  • Used in: Australia, New Zealand, Canada

Imperial Cup: 284 mL (10 imperial fl oz)

  • Used in: Historical UK recipes (rarely used today)

Difference:

  • Metric cup is 5.7% larger than US cup.
  • Imperial cup is 20% larger than US cup.

Impact:

  • Using the wrong cup can affect recipe results!
  • Always check which cup system a recipe uses.

How many tablespoons are in a cup?

16 tablespoons = 1 cup

Breakdown:

  • 1/4 cup = 4 tablespoons
  • 1/3 cup = 5⅓ tablespoons
  • 1/2 cup = 8 tablespoons
  • 2/3 cup = 10⅔ tablespoons
  • 3/4 cup = 12 tablespoons

Why This Matters:

  • If you don't have a 1/3 cup measure, use 5 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon.

Is a dry cup different from a liquid cup?

Same volume, different measuring technique.

Liquid Cup:

  • Tool: Measuring cup with spout and markings below rim.
  • Method: Pour liquid to the line, check at eye level.
  • Use: Water, milk, oil, broth.

Dry Cup:

  • Tool: Measuring cup with flat rim.
  • Method: Scoop or spoon ingredient, level off with knife.
  • Use: Flour, sugar, rice, oats.

Why It Matters:

  • Flour: Scooping packs it down (too much flour).
  • Correct: Spoon flour into cup, level off.

How do I measure flour correctly?

The Right Way (Spoon & Level):

  1. Fluff the flour in the bag/container.
  2. Spoon flour into the measuring cup (don't scoop!).
  3. Level off with a straight edge (knife, spatula).

The Wrong Way (Scoop & Pack):

  • Scooping directly from the bag packs flour down.
  • Can add 25-30% more flour than intended.
  • Results in dry, dense baked goods.

Weight is Better:

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour = 120-125 g (spooned & leveled).
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour = 140-150 g (scooped & packed).
  • Use a kitchen scale for precision!

Can I use a coffee mug as a measuring cup?

Not recommended!

Why:

  • Coffee mugs vary in size (8-16 oz).
  • No markings for precise measurement.
  • Not calibrated for cooking.

Exception:

  • If you're making a ratio-based recipe (e.g., 1 mug rice to 2 mugs water), it works because the ratio stays consistent.

Best Practice:

  • Use proper measuring cups ($5-10 for a set).

How many cups in a pound?

It depends on the ingredient! Volume ≠ Weight.

| Ingredient | Cups per Pound | |------------|----------------| | Water | 1.9 cups | | All-Purpose Flour | 3.6-4 cups | | Granulated Sugar | 2.25 cups | | Brown Sugar (Packed) | 2 cups | | Butter | 2 cups (4 sticks) | | Rice (Uncooked) | 2.4 cups | | Honey | 1.33 cups |

Key Insight: Always check a conversion chart for the specific ingredient!

Why do British recipes use grams instead of cups?

Accuracy!

Volume (Cups):

  • Inconsistent: Packing affects measurement.
  • Ingredient-dependent: 1 cup flour ≠ 1 cup sugar in weight.

Weight (Grams):

  • Consistent: 100 g flour is always 100 g.
  • Precise: No packing variability.
  • Professional: All commercial baking uses weight.

US vs. UK Baking Culture:

  • US: Home cooks use cups (tradition, convenience).
  • UK: Home cooks use grams (metric system adoption).

How do I convert a US recipe to metric?

Method 1: Use Metric Cups (Australia/NZ)

  • Replace US cups with metric cups (250 mL).
  • Note: 5.7% difference may affect results.

Method 2: Use Weight (Recommended)

  • Convert cups to grams using a conversion chart.
  • Example: 1 cup flour (US) = 120 g.

Method 3: Use Milliliters

  • 1 US cup = 237 mL (round to 240 mL for simplicity).

Conversion Table: Pint (US) to Cup

Pint (US) (pt)Cup (cup)
0.51
12
1.53
24
510
1020
2550
50100
100200
250500
5001,000
1,0002,000

People Also Ask

How do I convert Pint (US) to Cup?

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

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What is the conversion factor from Pint (US) to Cup?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Pint (US) and Cup. 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 Cup back to Pint (US)?

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

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What are common uses for Pint (US) and Cup?

Pint (US) and Cup are both standard units used in volume measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our volume converter for more conversion options.

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

All Volume Conversions

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Verified Against Authority Standards

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

NIST Volume Measurement

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyStandards for volume measurements

Last verified: February 19, 2026