Ton (metric) to Pound Converter
Convert tons to pounds with our free online weight converter.
Quick Answer
1 Ton (metric) = 2204.622622 pounds
Formula: Ton (metric) × conversion factor = Pound
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
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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.
Ton (metric) to Pound Calculator
How to Use the Ton (metric) to Pound Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Ton (metric)).
- The converted value in Pound will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Weight category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Ton (metric) to Pound: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Ton (metric) to Pound involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Ton (metric) = 2204.62 poundsExample Calculation:
Convert 5 tons: 5 × 2204.62 = 11023.1 pounds
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.
Need to convert to other weight units?
View all Weight conversions →What is a Ton (metric) and a Pound?
The metric ton (or tonne, symbol: t) is a unit of mass equal to 1,000 kilograms (kg). It is part of the International System of Units (SI) - although not technically a base SI unit itself, it is accepted for use with SI. It is equivalent to approximately 2,204.6 pounds.
Key relationships:
- 1 metric ton = 1,000 kilograms (kg)
- 1 metric ton = 1,000,000 grams (g)
- 1 metric ton ≈ 2,204.62 pounds (lb)
- 1 metric ton ≈ 1.10231 US tons (short tons)
- 1 metric ton ≈ 0.984207 UK tons (long tons)
Important distinction:
- Metric ton (tonne): 1,000 kg = 2,204.6 lb
- US ton (short ton): 2,000 lb = 907.185 kg
- UK ton (long ton): 2,240 lb = 1,016.05 kg
The metric ton is about 10% heavier than a US ton. Use our ton converter to avoid confusion.
In perspective:
- Compact car: ~1 metric ton
- Adult elephant: ~5-7 metric tons
- School bus: ~10-15 metric tons
- Shipping container (loaded): ~20-30 metric tons
- Blue whale: ~100-200 metric tons
Convert tons to other units with our weight converter.
The pound is a unit of mass in the British imperial and United States customary systems of measurement. Since the international yard and pound agreement of 1959, one pound has been defined as exactly 0.45359237 kilograms. This makes the pound equal to precisely 16 ounces, 7,000 grains, or 453.59237 grams.
The pound is denoted by the symbol lb (from the Latin libra, meaning balance or scales) or sometimes lbs for plural, though technically "lb" serves both singular and plural. In commercial contexts, you'll see prices as "$/lb" (dollars per pound) or weights as "5 lb bag."
Unlike the metric system where weight relationships are decimal (1,000 grams = 1 kilogram), the pound uses the relationship of 16 ounces to 1 pound. This fractional system reflects historical divisions: 1 pound = 16 ounces = 256 drams = 7,000 grains, with each division serving practical purposes in trade and measurement.
Note: The Ton (metric) is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Pound belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Ton (metric) and Pound
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Etymology: The term "tonne" derives from the "tun", an old English unit of volume for large casks used in wine and beer trade. The word evolved through French ("tonneau") before being adapted for the metric system.
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Metric System Development: The metric ton was defined as 1,000 kilograms to provide a larger, practical metric unit for commerce, trade, and industry. This maintained the decimal nature of the metric system while providing a convenient unit for heavy goods.
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Why 1,000 kg?: The choice aligned with the metric prefix system:
- 1 gram = base unit for daily use
- 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams (convenient for everyday weighing)
- 1 metric ton = 1,000 kilograms (convenient for heavy industry)
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International Adoption: As countries adopted the metric system throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the metric ton became the standard for international trade, shipping, and industrial production.
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SI Acceptance: When the International System of Units (SI) was established in 1960, the metric ton was accepted for use with SI units as a practical multiple of the kilogram (the SI base unit of mass).
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Spelling Variations:
- "Tonne" is the international spelling (French origin)
- "Metric ton" is used in the US to distinguish from US/UK tons
- Both refer to the same unit: 1,000 kg
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Modern Usage: Today, the metric ton is the global standard in shipping, international trade, agriculture, mining, and most industrial applications. Only a few countries (primarily the US) still use non-metric tons for domestic purposes.
The pound represents one of the oldest weight measurements in continuous use, with lineage tracing back over two millennia.
Roman Origins: The word "pound" derives from the Latin pondus (weight), while the symbol "lb" comes from libra, the Roman unit of weight equal to approximately 329 grams. The Romans used a libra divided into 12 unciae (ounces), though this differs from the modern 16-ounce pound.
Medieval Development: Multiple "pounds" existed simultaneously in medieval Europe—the tower pound (5,400 grains), merchant's pound (6,750 grains), and troy pound (5,760 grains) for precious metals. This created confusion in commerce and necessitated standardization.
Avoirdupois System: In 13th-century England, the avoirdupois system (from Old French aver de peis, "goods of weight") emerged for general commerce. The avoirdupois pound standardized at 16 ounces, each containing 437.5 grains, totaling 7,000 grains per pound. This system proved so practical for trade that it displaced most other pound definitions.
British Standardization: The Weights and Measures Act of 1824 established the imperial pound throughout the British Empire, legally defining it through physical standards. The Imperial Standard Pound, a platinum cylinder, was kept at the Houses of Parliament as the official definition.
US Independence: After the American Revolution, the United States maintained the British pound definition from colonial times. The Mendenhall Order of 1893 tied US weights to metric standards: 1 pound = 0.4535924277 kilograms (based on 1 meter = 39.37 inches).
1959 International Agreement: The international yard and pound agreement unified English-speaking nations. The United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa agreed that 1 pound equals exactly 0.45359237 kilograms. This created perfect mathematical alignment between imperial and metric systems.
Troy vs. Avoirdupois: Two pound systems coexist today. The avoirdupois pound (16 oz, 453.6 g) is used for general commerce and everyday measurements. The troy pound (12 troy oz, 373.2 g) survives only for precious metals—gold, silver, platinum. When someone says "pound" without qualifier, they always mean avoirdupois pound.
Cultural Persistence: Despite metric conversion efforts worldwide, the pound persists in American daily life. The 1975 Metric Conversion Act made metric "preferred" but voluntary, allowing continued pound usage. Today, Americans buy meat in pounds, weigh themselves in pounds, and ship packages in pounds, maintaining a measurement tradition spanning centuries.
Common Uses and Applications: tons vs pounds
Explore the typical applications for both Ton (metric) (imperial/US) and Pound (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for tons
The metric ton is the international standard for measuring large-scale masses:
Transportation
Measuring the mass of vehicles like cars, trucks, buses, trains, ships, and aircraft. Vehicle specifications, loading limits, and freight capacity are expressed in metric tons worldwide.
Common Applications:
- Vehicle curb weight and gross weight
- Cargo payload capacity
- Shipping container limits (20-30 tons max)
- Bridge and road weight limits
- Ferry and ship capacity
Why it matters:
- Safety regulations based on weight limits
- Fuel efficiency calculations
- Infrastructure design (roads, bridges)
- Transportation costs calculated per ton
Convert vehicle weights: tons to pounds | tons to kg
Shipping & Logistics
Quantifying large amounts of bulk cargo in international shipping (e.g., coal, grain, ore, containers). Freight rates, ship capacity, and cargo manifests all use metric tons.
Shipping Terminology:
- Deadweight tonnage (DWT): Ship's cargo capacity
- Freight ton: Billing unit (can be weight or volume)
- Container weight: TEU (20-ft container) = up to 28 tons
- Cargo weight limits: Road, rail, sea transport
Industries Using Tons:
- Ocean freight (bulk carriers, container ships)
- Rail freight (coal, grain, minerals)
- Road haulage (trucking industry)
- Air freight (larger cargo planes)
- Warehouse logistics (storage capacity)
Agriculture
Expressing crop yields and large-scale agricultural production. Harvest amounts, commodity trading, and agricultural statistics use metric tons.
Agricultural Metrics:
- Crop yield: Tons per hectare (t/ha)
- Total harvest: Thousands or millions of tons
- Livestock weight: Individual animals in tons
- Feed requirements: Tons per season
- Grain storage: Silo capacity in tons
- Commodity prices: Dollars per metric ton
Common Crops Measured in Tons:
- Wheat, corn, rice, soybeans
- Potatoes, sugar beets
- Cotton (seed and fiber)
- Fruits and vegetables (large-scale)
Heavy Industry
Standard unit for production outputs in steel manufacturing, mining, construction, cement production, and other heavy industries.
Steel Industry:
- Production capacity: Millions of tons per year
- Steel mill output: Tons per day
- Raw materials: Iron ore, coal in tons
- Finished products: Steel beams, plates in tons
Mining:
- Ore extraction: Tons per day/year
- Processing capacity: Tons per hour
- Mineral reserves: Million/billion tons
- Tailings: Waste measured in tons
Construction:
- Concrete: Cubic meters → tons conversion
- Asphalt: Road paving in tons
- Aggregates: Gravel, sand, crushed stone
- Structural steel: Building materials
Chemical Industry:
- Production volumes
- Reactor capacity
- Storage tank capacity
- Product shipments
Use our ton converter for industrial calculations.
Waste Management
Calculating municipal solid waste volumes, recycling quantities, and landfill capacity. Environmental regulations often specify limits in metric tons.
Waste Metrics:
- Per capita waste: kg/person/year → tons/year
- City waste: Thousands of tons per year
- Landfill capacity: Million tons
- Recycling rates: Percentage of tons diverted
- Hazardous waste: Tons requiring special handling
Environmental Regulations:
- Emission limits (tons per year)
- Waste reduction targets
- Recycling goals
- Carbon credits (tons of CO₂)
International Trade
Standard unit for commodity trading and international commerce. Prices for bulk commodities are quoted per metric ton.
Commodities Traded by the Ton:
- Metals: Iron, steel, copper, aluminum
- Minerals: Coal, iron ore, bauxite
- Agricultural: Wheat, corn, soybeans, rice
- Energy: Oil (barrels converted to tons), coal
- Chemicals: Fertilizers, plastics, industrial chemicals
Trade Documentation:
- Bills of lading (metric tons)
- Customs declarations
- Import/export statistics
- Freight forwarding
- Commodity exchanges (futures contracts)
Environmental Science
Measuring emissions, pollution, and environmental impact. Carbon footprints, greenhouse gases, and pollutant loads are quantified in metric tons.
Carbon Accounting:
- CO₂ emissions: Tons per year
- Carbon footprint: Individual/organization/country
- Carbon credits: Traded in tons of CO₂ equivalent
- Climate goals: Reduce emissions by millions of tons
Pollution Measurement:
- Air pollutants: Tons per year
- Water pollutants: Tons discharged
- Soil contamination: Tons of material
- Plastic waste: Ocean plastic in tons
When to Use pounds
Medical and Healthcare Settings
Healthcare in the US primarily operates in pounds for patient weight, though hospitals increasingly record kilograms for medication dosing calculations. Patient charts typically show both: "185 lbs (84 kg)." However, all patient communication uses pounds—doctors say "You've gained 5 pounds" or "Try to lose 10-15 pounds," never kilograms.
Weight-based medication dosing creates complexity: drugs dose in mg/kg, requiring conversion. A 160-lb patient equals 72.6 kg, so a drug dosed at 5 mg/kg requires 363 mg. Medical staff use conversion charts or electronic calculators to prevent errors.
Anesthesiology requires precise weight for medication dosing. Operating room scales display both pounds and kilograms, with staff typically asking patients "What's your weight in pounds?" for verification against chart data.
Public health BMI calculations use pounds and inches in the US: BMI = (weight in pounds × 703) ÷ (height in inches)². A person 5'9" (69") weighing 170 lbs has BMI = (170 × 703) ÷ (69 × 69) = 25.1, just into the "overweight" category (BMI 25-29.9).
Weight Loss and Fitness Industry
Diet programs, weight loss apps, and fitness tracking exclusively use pounds in the US market. Weight Watchers, MyFitnessPal, Lose It!, and similar apps default to pounds, though users can switch to kilograms.
Fitness goals frame in pounds: "Lose 20 pounds by summer," "Gain 10 pounds of muscle," "Drop 5 pounds this month." Personal trainers track client progress in pounds, celebrating milestone losses: "You've lost 25 pounds—that's like losing two bowling balls!"
Scale psychology creates significance for specific numbers. Dropping below 200 lbs (reaching "onederland") represents a major milestone for many dieters. Breaking into the 100s (199 lbs) feels dramatically different from 200 lbs despite being only 1 pound difference.
Bodybuilding competitions divide by weight classes in pounds: lightweight (<154 lbs), middleweight (154-176 lbs), light-heavyweight (176-198 lbs), heavyweight (198-242 lbs), super-heavyweight (>242 lbs). Competitors cut weight aggressively, sometimes losing 10-20 lbs of water weight in final days before weigh-in.
Commercial Food Service and Restaurants
Restaurant kitchens order ingredients in pounds and bulk quantities:
- 50-lb bags of onions
- 40-lb cases of chicken breast
- 25-lb blocks of cheese
- 5-lb containers of mayonnaise
- 10-lb boxes of bacon
Recipe scaling in commercial kitchens calculates in pounds: a recipe serving 20 using 2 lbs ground beef scales to serve 100 by using 10 lbs. Kitchen scales measure in pounds and ounces, with precision to 0.1 oz for small quantities.
Food costs calculate per pound: if chicken costs $2.50/lb and a dish uses 6 oz (0.375 lbs), the protein cost is $0.94 per serving. Restaurant profitability depends on accurate food costing, requiring staff to think fluently in pounds and ounces.
Portion control uses ounces: 8-oz steak, 6-oz salmon fillet, 4-oz burger patty (quarter-pounder). Pre-portioned proteins simplify cooking and ensure consistency. A case of forty 4-oz burger patties weighs 10 lbs total.
Postal and Freight Shipping
The entire US shipping industry operates in pounds. Postage rates tier by weight:
USPS First-Class Mail:
- Up to 3 oz: $0.63 (letter)
- Up to 13 oz: Incrementally increases
- Over 13 oz: Requires Priority Mail
Priority Mail tiers:
- Up to 1 lb: $8.50 flat rate (approximate regional)
- 1-2 lbs: $9.50
- 2-3 lbs: $11.00
- Continues in 1-lb increments to 70 lbs
Shipping costs increase dramatically with weight. A 15.5-lb package costs significantly more than a 15-lb package if it crosses a tier boundary. Online sellers optimize packaging to stay within weight tiers: use lighter boxes, remove unnecessary materials, choose compact packaging.
Freight shipping (over 150 lbs) charges by "hundredweight" (CWT): cost per 100 lbs. A 750-lb shipment traveling 500 miles at $45/CWT costs $337.50 (7.5 × $45).
Farming and Agriculture
Agricultural commerce operates entirely in pounds:
Crop yields per acre:
- Corn: 170-200 bushels/acre (56 lbs per bushel = 9,520-11,200 lbs/acre)
- Soybeans: 50-60 bushels/acre (60 lbs per bushel = 3,000-3,600 lbs/acre)
- Wheat: 50-70 bushels/acre (60 lbs per bushel = 3,000-4,200 lbs/acre)
Livestock weights:
- Market hogs: Sold at 250-280 lbs live weight
- Feeder cattle: Sold at 600-800 lbs, finished at 1,200-1,400 lbs
- Broiler chickens: Processed at 5-6 lbs
- Turkeys: Processed at 25-30 lbs
Feed calculations:
- Dairy cow eats 50-60 lbs of feed daily
- Beef cattle eat 25-30 lbs of feed daily during finishing
- Horse eats 15-25 lbs of hay daily
- Bag of horse feed: 50 lbs (common size)
Farmers sell crops and livestock by the pound or hundredweight (100 lbs). Commodity prices quote in cents per pound: corn at $0.055/lb, soybeans at $0.15/lb (converted from bushel prices).
Manufacturing and Industrial Production
Manufacturing specs, especially for non-precision work, use pounds:
Sheet metal weight:
- Steel sheet weight: pounds per square foot for given thickness
- Aluminum sheet: Lighter than steel at same thickness
- Copper sheet: Heavier than steel
Material handling:
- Pallet weight limits: 2,500 lbs typical
- Forklift capacity: 3,000-5,000 lbs common
- Hand truck/dolly: 500-800 lbs capacity
Product specifications:
- Appliances: Refrigerator 200-300 lbs, washing machine 150-200 lbs
- Furniture: Dining table 50-150 lbs, dresser 100-200 lbs
- Machinery: Small lathe 500-1,500 lbs, mill 2,000-5,000 lbs
Shipping and logistics calculate by weight and dimensions. Freight classifications assign classes based on weight density (pounds per cubic foot): class 50 (50+ lbs/cu ft, densest), class 500 (1 lb/cu ft, lightest).
Waste Management and Recycling
Waste services charge based on weight:
Dumpster weight limits:
- 10-yard dumpster: 2-3 tons (4,000-6,000 lbs) weight limit
- 20-yard dumpster: 3-4 tons (6,000-8,000 lbs)
- 40-yard dumpster: 5-6 tons (10,000-12,000 lbs)
Exceeding weight limits incurs fees: $50-100 per ton over limit. Construction debris (concrete, brick, dirt) quickly exceeds weight limits despite not filling volume.
Recycling programs:
- Aluminum cans: ~30 cans per pound, recyclers pay $0.30-0.50/lb
- Scrap steel: $0.05-0.15/lb
- Copper: $2-4/lb (valuable, often stolen)
- Cardboard: $0.02-0.10/lb
- Paper: $0.01-0.05/lb
Individuals recycling metals weigh loads at scrap yards on drive-over scales, receiving payment based on total pounds by category.
Pet Care and Veterinary Medicine
Pet food portion recommendations use pounds:
- Small dogs (<20 lbs): 1/2 to 1 cup food daily
- Medium dogs (20-50 lbs): 1 to 2 cups daily
- Large dogs (50-90 lbs): 2 to 3.5 cups daily
- Giant dogs (>90 lbs): 3.5 to 5+ cups daily
Medication dosing requires accurate pet weight. A 40-lb dog receiving medication at 1 mg/lb needs a 40 mg dose. Underdosing proves ineffective; overdosing risks toxicity.
Veterinarians track pet weight over time, flagging unhealthy gains or losses. "Fluffy has gained 3 pounds since last year—we need to reduce portions" or "Max has lost 5 pounds unexpectedly—let's run some tests."
Additional Unit Information
About Ton (metric) (t)
How many kilograms are in a metric ton?
There are exactly 1,000 kilograms (kg) in 1 metric ton (t).
- 1 metric ton = 1,000 kg
- To convert tons to kg: multiply by 1,000
- To convert kg to tons: divide by 1,000
- Example: 2.5 metric tons = 2.5 × 1,000 = 2,500 kg
- Example: 3,500 kg = 3,500 ÷ 1,000 = 3.5 metric tons
Use our ton to kilogram converter for instant conversions.
Is a metric ton the same as a US ton?
No. A metric ton is NOT the same as a US ton.
Metric Ton (Tonne):
- 1,000 kg = 2,204.6 pounds
- Used internationally
- Standard for global trade
US Ton (Short Ton):
- 2,000 pounds = 907.185 kg
- Used primarily in the United States
- Domestic commerce and industry
Difference: A metric ton is approximately 10% heavier than a US ton.
- 1 metric ton ≈ 1.102 US tons
- 1 US ton ≈ 0.907 metric tons
Why it matters: Significant difference in shipping, pricing, and cargo calculations. Always clarify which ton is being used!
Convert between them: Metric ton to US ton | Ton to pound
Why is it sometimes spelled "tonne"?
"Tonne" is the international spelling used to clearly distinguish the metric ton from imperial/US tons (short ton and long ton).
Usage:
- "Tonne": International standard, used in UK, Australia, Europe, Asia
- "Metric ton": Used in the United States to distinguish from US ton
- Both refer to the same unit: 1,000 kilograms
Pronunciation: Same pronunciation for both ("tun")
Why different spellings exist:
- Avoids confusion with short ton (US) and long ton (UK)
- "Tonne" comes from French ("tonneau")
- Makes documentation clearer in international trade
- Some industries prefer one spelling over the other
In practice: Use "metric ton" in US contexts, "tonne" elsewhere, or specify "1,000 kg" to be absolutely clear.
How many pounds are in a metric ton?
1 metric ton = 2,204.62 pounds (lb)
Commonly rounded to 2,205 pounds for practical use.
Conversion:
- Exact: 1 metric ton = 2,204.62262 lb
- Practical: 1 metric ton ≈ 2,205 lb
- To convert: metric tons × 2,204.6 = pounds
- Example: 5 metric tons = 5 × 2,204.6 = 11,023 lb
Comparison to US ton:
- Metric ton: 2,204.6 lb
- US ton: 2,000 lb
- Difference: 204.6 lb (about 10%)
Quick mental math:
- 1 metric ton ≈ 2,200 pounds (slightly under)
- Close to 1.1 US tons
Use our metric ton to pound converter for accurate conversions.
What weighs about 1 metric ton?
Common items that weigh approximately 1 metric ton (1,000 kg or 2,205 lb):
Vehicles:
- Small compact car (Honda Fit, Smart Car)
- Small motorcycle collection (several bikes)
- Small boat with trailer
- Golf cart (industrial models)
Animals:
- Large horse
- Large bison or buffalo
- Very large saltwater crocodile
- Small whale (pilot whale)
Materials:
- 1 cubic meter of water (exactly 1 ton)
- About 500 bricks
- Pallet of bottled water (about 1,000 bottles)
- 18-20 bags of cement (50 kg each)
Agricultural:
- Mid-size dairy cow
- Small harvest of grain (about 1,000 kg)
- Large hay bale (2-3 large round bales)
Household:
- Contents of a small apartment
- 10-15 washing machines
- 15-20 refrigerators
Perspective: Most passenger cars weigh 1-2 metric tons. A metric ton is substantial but not enormous - about half the weight of a typical sedan.
How do you convert cubic meters to metric tons?
You can't directly convert - cubic meters (m³) measure volume, metric tons (t) measure mass. You need to know the density of the material.
Formula: Mass (tons) = Volume (m³) × Density (tons/m³)
Common Material Densities:
Liquids:
- Water: 1 m³ = 1 ton (exactly, at 4°C)
- Gasoline: 1 m³ = 0.75 ton
- Diesel: 1 m³ = 0.85 ton
- Crude oil: 1 m³ = 0.8-0.95 ton
- Milk: 1 m³ = 1.03 ton
Construction Materials:
- Concrete: 1 m³ = 2.4 ton
- Asphalt: 1 m³ = 2.3 ton
- Gravel: 1 m³ = 1.5-1.7 ton
- Sand (dry): 1 m³ = 1.6 ton
- Topsoil: 1 m³ = 1.2-1.4 ton
Metals:
- Steel: 1 m³ = 7.85 ton
- Aluminum: 1 m³ = 2.7 ton
- Copper: 1 m³ = 8.96 ton
- Gold: 1 m³ = 19.3 ton
Wood (varies greatly):
- Softwood: 1 m³ = 0.4-0.6 ton
- Hardwood: 1 m³ = 0.6-0.9 ton
Example: How many tons is 10 m³ of concrete?
- 10 m³ × 2.4 tons/m³ = 24 metric tons
Tip: Always check the specific material's density for accurate conversion.
How many metric tons can a truck carry?
It varies widely by truck type and regulations:
Light Trucks:
- Pickup truck (half-ton): 0.5-1 ton payload
- Pickup truck (one-ton): 1-1.5 ton payload
- Cargo van: 1-1.5 ton
- Small box truck: 1-2 ton
Medium Trucks:
- Medium box truck: 3-5 ton
- Large delivery truck: 5-8 ton
- Flatbed truck: 8-12 ton
- Dump truck: 10-15 ton
Heavy Trucks (Semi-trucks):
- Typical semi-truck: 20-25 ton payload
- Maximum legal (US): ~23 ton (gross weight 36 ton)
- Maximum legal (Europe): ~26 ton (gross weight 40-44 ton)
- Special permit: Up to 40+ ton (overweight permits)
Specialized:
- Mining dump truck: 100-400 ton
- Logging truck: 20-30 ton
- Concrete mixer: 8-10 ton of concrete
- Tanker truck: 20-30 ton of liquid
Legal Limits Vary By:
- Country/region regulations
- Road type (highway vs local)
- Number of axles
- Permits (standard vs overweight)
Note: These are payload capacities (cargo weight), not including the truck's own weight.
What is the difference between gross ton and net ton?
Gross Ton and Net Ton refer to different measurement contexts:
In Shipping:
Gross Tonnage (GT):
- Measures a ship's overall internal volume
- NOT weight - despite "tonnage" in the name!
- Used for registration, regulations, port fees
- Formula based on enclosed spaces
- Example: Cruise ship = 100,000 GT
Net Tonnage (NT):
- Measures a ship's earning capacity (cargo space volume)
- Also volume, not weight
- Excludes crew quarters, machinery, etc.
- Example: Same cruise ship = 50,000 NT
In Mining/Refining:
Gross Ton:
- Total weight including impurities
- Example: Iron ore with rock mixed in
Net Ton:
- Pure/usable material weight
- Example: Pure iron content only
In Commerce:
Gross Weight:
- Total weight including packaging, container
- Example: Product + box + pallet = gross weight
Net Weight:
- Product weight only (excluding packaging)
- Example: Just the product itself
Important: In most shipping contexts, "tonnage" refers to volume, not weight. For actual cargo weight, use "deadweight tonnage (DWT)" in metric tons.
How much is a ton of CO₂?
1 ton of CO₂ is a measurement used in climate science and carbon accounting. But what does it mean practically?
Visual Understanding (CO₂ is a gas, so it's about volume):
- 1 ton of CO₂ at normal pressure = ~509 cubic meters of gas
- That's a cube about 8 meters on each side (26 feet)
- Enough to fill a small house!
How Much Do We Emit?
Individual Activities:
- Driving: 1 ton CO₂ = ~2,500 miles in average car
- Flying: 1 ton CO₂ = ~1 passenger, economy, transatlantic flight
- Electricity: 1 ton CO₂ = ~1,700 kWh (varies by power source)
- Natural gas heating: 1 ton CO₂ = ~500 therms
Average Annual Emissions:
- US person: ~16 tons CO₂/year
- Europe person: ~6-8 tons CO₂/year
- Global average: ~4 tons CO₂/year
- Target (Paris Agreement): ~2 tons CO₂/year by 2050
To Offset 1 Ton of CO₂:
- Plant ~50-100 trees (over their lifetime)
- Avoid ~1,000 miles of driving
- Switch to renewable energy for several months
- Reduce meat consumption significantly
Cost of Carbon:
- Carbon credits: $10-50 per ton (varies by market)
- Carbon tax: Varies by country
- Offset programs: $10-30 per ton typically
Why It Matters: Understanding ton of CO₂ helps track climate impact, set reduction goals, and calculate carbon footprints.
How many metric tons is a shipping container?
Container Weight Depends on Type and Loading:
Empty Container Weight:
- 20-ft container: 2.3 metric tons (empty)
- 40-ft container: 3.7 metric tons (empty)
- 40-ft high cube: 3.9 metric tons (empty)
Maximum Gross Weight (container + cargo):
- 20-ft container: 28-30 metric tons max
- 40-ft container: 30 metric tons max
- 40-ft high cube: 30 metric tons max
Maximum Payload (cargo only):
- 20-ft container: ~25-28 metric tons of cargo
- 40-ft container: ~26-27 metric tons of cargo
Actual Cargo Weight Varies:
- Light cargo (furniture, clothing): 5-15 tons
- Medium cargo (packaged goods): 15-22 tons
- Heavy cargo (machinery, metals): 22-28 tons
Weight Restrictions:
- Road transport: Often limited to 20-24 tons (varies by country)
- Rail transport: Can handle full 28-30 tons
- Ship transport: Full weight capacity usually available
Volume vs Weight:
- Container volume: 20-ft = 33 m³, 40-ft = 67 m³
- If cargo is light: Volume fills before weight limit
- If cargo is dense: Weight limit reached before volume fills
Example:
- Container full of styrofoam: ~5 tons (volume limited)
- Container full of steel plates: ~28 tons (weight limited)
TEU = Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit (shipping industry standard):
- 1 TEU = One 20-ft container
- 1 FEU = One 40-ft container = 2 TEU
How do I convert short tons to metric tons?
1 US short ton = 0.907185 metric tons 1 metric ton = 1.10231 short tons
Conversion Formulas:
- Short tons to metric tons: multiply by 0.907185
- Metric tons to short tons: multiply by 1.10231
Examples:
- 10 short tons = 10 × 0.907 = 9.07 metric tons
- 10 metric tons = 10 × 1.102 = 11.02 short tons
- 100 short tons = 90.7 metric tons
- 1,000 metric tons = 1,102 short tons
Quick Approximations:
- Short tons to metric: Subtract ~10% (multiply by 0.9)
- Metric to short tons: Add ~10% (multiply by 1.1)
Why Different?:
- US short ton: 2,000 pounds = 907.185 kg
- Metric ton: 1,000 kg = 2,204.6 pounds
- Metric ton is 10% heavier
When to Convert:
- International trade (metric tons standard)
- US domestic to global markets
- Engineering specifications
- Scientific publications (use metric)
Use Our Converter: Short ton to metric ton for precise conversions - avoid manual calculation errors!
Also Available:
- Long ton (UK): 2,240 lb = 1.016 metric tons
- Long ton to metric ton converter
About Pound (lb)
How many ounces are in a pound?
There are exactly 16 ounces in 1 avoirdupois pound. This relationship is fundamental to the US customary weight system and has remained constant since the avoirdupois system was standardized in 13th-century England.
The 16-ounce division allows convenient fractional measurements: 1/2 pound = 8 oz, 1/4 pound = 4 oz (quarter-pounder burger), 1/8 pound = 2 oz. Food packaging commonly uses both: "1 lb (16 oz)" or "12 oz (3/4 lb)."
Converting pounds to ounces: Multiply pounds by 16
- 1 lb = 16 oz
- 2.5 lbs = 40 oz
- 0.75 lbs = 12 oz (three-quarters of a pound)
Converting ounces to pounds: Divide ounces by 16
- 32 oz = 2 lbs
- 24 oz = 1.5 lbs
- 10 oz = 0.625 lbs
Mixed notation: "5 lbs 10 oz" means 5 pounds + 10 ounces = (5 × 16) + 10 = 90 ounces total.
Important distinction: Fluid ounces (volume) and ounces (weight) are different measurements. "16 fluid ounces" of water weighs approximately 16 ounces, but 16 fluid ounces of honey weighs about 24 ounces. The context determines which "ounce" is meant.
How do I convert pounds to kilograms?
To convert pounds to kilograms, multiply by 0.45359237. This is the exact conversion factor established by the 1959 international agreement.
Formula: kilograms = pounds × 0.45359237
Examples:
- 1 lb = 0.454 kg
- 10 lbs = 4.536 kg
- 50 lbs = 22.680 kg
- 100 lbs = 45.359 kg
- 150 lbs = 68.039 kg
- 200 lbs = 90.718 kg
Quick approximation: For mental math, divide pounds by 2.2 (or multiply by 0.45):
- 100 lbs ÷ 2.2 ≈ 45.5 kg (actual: 45.36 kg)
- 150 lbs ÷ 2.2 ≈ 68.2 kg (actual: 68.04 kg)
Reverse conversion (kg to lbs): Multiply kilograms by 2.20462
- 10 kg = 22.046 lbs
- 50 kg = 110.231 lbs
- 75 kg = 165.347 lbs
For professional contexts (medical dosing, commercial trade, engineering), always use the exact conversion factor. For casual estimates ("How heavy is that in kilograms?"), dividing by 2.2 provides close enough results.
What measurement system uses pounds?
The pound (lb) is a key unit in the imperial and US customary measurement systems. While the UK officially adopted the metric system in 1965, pounds remain common for body weight, and road signs still show distances in miles. The United States uses pounds extensively across all aspects of daily life.
Where pounds are standard:
- United States: Primary weight unit for commerce, body weight, cooking, shipping
- United Kingdom: Still common for body weight (though officially metric)
- Canada: Used alongside metric, especially for body weight and produce
- Caribbean nations: Many former British colonies maintain some imperial usage
Where kilograms dominate:
- European Union countries (mandatory metric since 1960s-1990s)
- Asia (Japan, China, Korea, etc.)
- Australia and New Zealand (converted to metric 1970s)
- Latin America
- Africa (except Liberia)
Hybrid usage: Many countries officially metric still use pounds informally. UK residents often describe body weight in stones and pounds despite official metric policy. Canada labels food in both grams and ounces.
Where is the pound commonly used?
The pound is primarily used in the United States for everyday measurements. Americans use pounds for:
Personal:
- Body weight (bathroom scales, medical records)
- Baby weight ("7 pounds, 6 ounces")
- Pet weight (vet visits, food portions)
- Luggage weight (airline limits)
Commerce:
- Grocery pricing ($3.99/lb for meat, produce)
- Postal shipping (USPS rates by pound)
- Food packaging (5-lb bag of flour)
- Restaurant portions (8-oz steak, quarter-pound burger)
Industrial:
- Construction materials (80-lb bag of concrete)
- Agricultural commodities (livestock sold per pound)
- Manufacturing specifications (product weights)
- Freight shipping (charges per 100 lbs)
The United Kingdom and Canada also use pounds commonly, though officially metric. UK residents often state body weight in stones and pounds. Canadian grocery stores show prices in both $/lb and $/kg.
In aviation, pounds of thrust measure jet engine power worldwide, and pounds of fuel calculate aircraft loading, even in metric countries—similar to altitude measured in feet globally.
Why do we use "lb" for pound?
The symbol "lb" comes from the Latin word libra, meaning balance or scales, which was the Roman unit of weight. The word "pound" itself derives from Latin pondus (weight), while the abbreviation preserved the Roman unit name.
Historical explanation:
- Roman libra ≈ 329 grams (about 0.7 modern pounds)
- Medieval scholars used "lb" as the standard abbreviation
- When the avoirdupois pound (16 oz, 454g) became England's commercial standard, it retained the Roman abbreviation despite the different weight value
Modern usage:
- "lb" serves both singular and plural (1 lb, 5 lb, not "5 lbs" technically, though "lbs" is common)
- Pronounced "pound" or "pounds" despite the letters "l-b"
- Used internationally in trade: "100 lb net weight"
Related terms:
- PSI = Pounds per Square Inch (pressure)
- lb-ft = pound-feet (torque)
- lb-test = fishing line strength (pounds of force before breaking)
The disconnect between spelling (lb) and pronunciation (pound) confuses English learners, but it's deeply embedded in language. No serious proposals exist to change it—tradition preserves the Roman abbreviation despite its non-phonetic representation.
What's the difference between mass and weight in pounds?
In scientific terms, mass measures the amount of matter in an object (kilogram or pound-mass), while weight measures the gravitational force on that mass (Newton or pound-force). However, in everyday American usage, "pound" refers to both interchangeably without distinction.
Scientific definitions:
- Mass (lbm): Amount of matter, constant regardless of location
- Weight (lbf): Force due to gravity = mass × acceleration
On Earth's surface, an object with 1 pound-mass (lbm) experiences 1 pound-force (lbf) of weight. On the Moon (1/6 Earth's gravity), that 1 lbm object would weigh only 0.167 lbf—but bathroom scales there would still show "1 lb" because they're calibrated for Earth gravity.
Everyday reality: When Americans say "I weigh 150 pounds," they technically mean "I have a mass that creates 150 pounds-force on Earth." Scales measure force (weight) but display mass units (pounds) assuming Earth gravity.
Engineering context: Engineers distinguish lbm (pound-mass) from lbf (pound-force) in calculations involving acceleration, thrust, or different gravitational environments. Aerospace applications carefully track both since spacecraft experience varying gravitational forces.
Practical impact: For everyday purposes—buying meat, weighing luggage, measuring body weight—the distinction doesn't matter. All occur at Earth's surface where 1 lbm = 1 lbf. Only in scientific, aerospace, or physics contexts does the mass vs. weight distinction require precision.
How much is a stone in pounds?
One stone equals exactly 14 pounds. The stone is a British imperial unit of weight still commonly used in the UK and Ireland for human body weight, though officially replaced by kilograms in most contexts.
Common conversions:
- 1 stone = 14 lbs = 6.35 kg
- 10 stone = 140 lbs = 63.5 kg
- 12 stone = 168 lbs = 76.2 kg
- 15 stone = 210 lbs = 95.3 kg
UK usage: British people typically express body weight in stones and pounds together:
- "I weigh 11 stone 8" = 11 stone + 8 lbs = 154 + 8 = 162 lbs total
- "I've lost half a stone" = lost 7 lbs
- "I need to lose 2 stone" = need to lose 28 lbs
Historical context: The stone was standardized in 1835 at 14 pounds for weighing people. Different stone weights existed historically for various commodities: wool stone (14 lbs), meat stone (8 lbs), cheese stone (16 lbs). The 14-pound definition survived for body weight.
Modern decline: Official UK government documents and medical records now use kilograms following metrication. However, bathroom scales in UK homes often still display stones and pounds, and older generations particularly think in stones when discussing weight.
US usage: Americans rarely use stones. When British media mentions someone weighing "12 stone," American audiences need conversion to understand this means 168 lbs.
Can you mix pounds and ounces in calculations?
Yes, but you must handle them carefully to avoid errors. Pounds and ounces can be added, subtracted, multiplied, and divided, but excess ounces must convert to pounds (since 16 oz = 1 lb).
Addition/Subtraction: Add or subtract pounds and ounces separately, then convert excess ounces:
- 5 lbs 10 oz + 3 lbs 8 oz = 8 lbs 18 oz = 9 lbs 2 oz (convert 18 oz = 1 lb 2 oz)
- 7 lbs 4 oz − 2 lbs 10 oz: borrow 1 lb = 16 oz, so 7 lbs 4 oz = 6 lbs 20 oz, then 6 lbs 20 oz − 2 lbs 10 oz = 4 lbs 10 oz
Multiplication/Division: Convert entirely to ounces or decimal pounds:
- Double 3 lbs 6 oz: Convert to 54 oz, double = 108 oz = 6 lbs 12 oz
- Half of 5 lbs 10 oz: Convert to 90 oz, half = 45 oz = 2 lbs 13 oz
- Or use decimal: 5 lbs 10 oz = 5.625 lbs, half = 2.8125 lbs = 2 lbs 13 oz
Decimal conversion:
- Pounds to decimal: 5 lbs 10 oz = 5 + (10÷16) = 5.625 lbs
- Decimal to pounds-ounces: 3.75 lbs = 3 lbs + 0.75 lbs = 3 lbs + 12 oz = 3 lbs 12 oz
Kitchen scales: Many digital scales switch between decimal pounds (5.63 lbs) and pounds-ounces (5 lbs 10 oz). Use decimal for recipe scaling and math, pounds-ounces for traditional recipes and portions.
What's a "hundredweight" and how does it relate to pounds?
A hundredweight (abbreviated cwt) is a unit equal to 100 pounds in the US customary system. It's primarily used in freight shipping, agriculture, and commodity trading for pricing and calculating large quantities.
US hundredweight (short hundredweight): 100 pounds exactly
- Used in United States and Canada
- Freight rates often quote as $/cwt (dollars per hundred pounds)
- Commodity prices: livestock, grains sometimes price per cwt
UK hundredweight (long hundredweight): 112 pounds (8 stone)
- Used historically in British imperial system
- Now largely obsolete in favor of metric
- Equal to 1/20 of a UK long ton (2,240 lbs)
Practical examples:
- Freight charges: "$25/cwt" means $25 per 100 lbs
- A 500-lb shipment at $25/cwt costs 5 × $25 = $125
- Cattle pricing: "$180/cwt" means $1.80/lb; 1,200-lb steer = $2,160
Ton relationships:
- US short ton = 2,000 lbs = 20 cwt
- UK long ton = 2,240 lbs = 20 (UK) cwt
- Metric tonne = 2,204.6 lbs ≈ 22 cwt
Why it persists: Hundredweight provides convenient round numbers for commodity trading and freight pricing. Saying "$45 per hundredweight" sounds simpler than "$0.45 per pound," and multiplying weight by hundredweight rate requires fewer decimal places.
How accurate do bathroom scales measure pounds?
Typical consumer bathroom scales measure weight accurate to ±0.2-1 pound (±90-450 grams), depending on quality and calibration. This means a scale showing "150 lbs" indicates your actual weight is likely between 149-151 lbs.
Scale types and accuracy:
- Spring/mechanical scales: ±1 lb typical accuracy, can drift over time
- Basic digital scales: ±0.5 lb typical accuracy
- High-quality digital scales: ±0.2 lb accuracy (±90 grams)
- Medical-grade scales: ±0.1 lb accuracy (±50 grams)
- Laboratory balances: ±0.01 lb accuracy (±5 grams)
Factors affecting accuracy:
- Surface: Scales must sit on hard, flat, level floors; carpet adds error
- Calibration: Scales drift over time and need periodic calibration
- Battery: Low battery affects digital scale accuracy
- Temperature: Extreme temperatures alter spring tension or sensor readings
- Weight distribution: Leaning or shifting weight creates false readings
Consistency vs. accuracy: For weight tracking, consistency matters more than absolute accuracy. If your scale consistently reads 2 lbs heavy, you can still track changes accurately. Weigh yourself same time daily (morning after bathroom, before eating), same scale, same conditions.
Verification: To check scale accuracy, weigh a known weight (10-lb dumbbell, 5-lb bag of flour). If the scale shows 10.2 lbs for a 10-lb dumbbell, it's within reasonable tolerance. Differences over 0.5 lbs suggest recalibration needed.
Conversion Table: Ton (metric) to Pound
| Ton (metric) (t) | Pound (lb) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 1,102.311 |
| 1 | 2,204.623 |
| 1.5 | 3,306.934 |
| 2 | 4,409.245 |
| 5 | 11,023.113 |
| 10 | 22,046.226 |
| 25 | 55,115.566 |
| 50 | 110,231.131 |
| 100 | 220,462.262 |
| 250 | 551,155.656 |
| 500 | 1,102,311.311 |
| 1,000 | 2,204,622.622 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Ton (metric) to Pound?
To convert Ton (metric) to Pound, enter the value in Ton (metric) in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our weight converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Ton (metric) to Pound?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Ton (metric) and Pound. 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 Pound back to Ton (metric)?
Yes! You can easily convert Pound back to Ton (metric) by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Pound to Ton (metric) converter page. You can also explore other weight conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Ton (metric) and Pound?
Ton (metric) and Pound are both standard units used in weight measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our weight converter for more conversion options.
For more weight conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
Helpful Conversion Guides
Learn more about unit conversion with our comprehensive guides:
📚 How to Convert Units
Step-by-step guide to unit conversion with practical examples.
🔢 Conversion Formulas
Essential formulas for weight and other conversions.
⚖️ Metric vs Imperial
Understand the differences between measurement systems.
⚠️ Common Mistakes
Learn about frequent errors and how to avoid them.
All Weight Conversions
Other Weight Units and Conversions
Explore other weight units and their conversion options:
- Kilogram (kg) • Ton (metric) to Kilogram
- Gram (g) • Ton (metric) to Gram
- Milligram (mg) • Ton (metric) to Milligram
- Ounce (oz) • Ton (metric) to Ounce
- Stone (st) • Ton (metric) to Stone
- Ton (US) (ton) • Ton (metric) to Ton (US)
- Ton (UK) (long ton) • Ton (metric) to Ton (UK)
- Microgram (µg) • Ton (metric) to Microgram
- Carat (ct) • Ton (metric) to Carat
- Slug (sl) • Ton (metric) to Slug
Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
National Institute of Standards and Technology — US standards for weight and mass measurements
International Organization for Standardization — International standard for mechanics quantities
Last verified: December 3, 2025