One cup is 236.588 mL in U.S. kitchen measures, 240 mL on U.S. nutrition labels, and 250 mL in many metric recipes.
“Cup” sounds plain. Then you convert it and get three different answers. That’s not you messing up math. It’s the word “cup” doing too much work.
This page sorts it out with the numbers you’ll meet most often, plus a simple way to pick the right one for your recipe, label, or classwork.
What 1 Cup Usually Means
In everyday cooking, “1 cup” most often points to the U.S. customary cup used in American recipes. That cup equals 236.588 mL.
Food labels in the United States follow a different rule. For nutrition labeling, a cup is set to 240 mL. You’ll see it show up in serving sizes and “per 1 cup (240 mL)” lines. The rule is written into U.S. labeling regs. FDA nutrition labeling unit definitions spell out that 1 cup equals 240 mL for that context.
Outside the U.S., many recipes use a metric cup. In Australia and New Zealand, and in plenty of online recipes written in metric style, a cup is 250 mL. Some measuring jugs sold internationally mark 1 cup at 250 mL, even when they also show U.S. cup lines.
How To Pick The Right Cup In Seconds
You don’t need a history lesson to cook dinner. You need the right conversion fast. Use this quick check.
Step 1: Spot Where The Recipe “Lives”
- U.S. recipe sites, U.S. cookbooks: treat 1 cup as 236.588 mL unless it states a metric cup.
- Australian or New Zealand sources: treat 1 cup as 250 mL.
- European recipe blogs written in metric: many still use 250 mL for “cup,” or they avoid cups and list grams and mL.
- Food packaging labels in the U.S.: treat 1 cup as 240 mL.
Step 2: Read The Measuring Cup In Your Hand
Flip it over or check the markings. Some sets say “1 cup = 240 mL.” Some show “1 cup = 250 mL.” A lot of U.S. metal cup sets don’t show mL at all, since they’re built around U.S. customary sizes.
If your cup has both “1 cup” and “250 mL” on the same line, that’s a metric-style cup. If it shows “240 mL” at 1 cup, it’s matching U.S. label convention. If it has no mL marks, assume it’s the U.S. customary cup used in American kitchens.
Step 3: Match Precision To The Task
A pancake batter can handle tiny swings. A custard, a gel recipe, or a lab worksheet may not. Pick your level:
- Everyday cooking: 1 cup → 240 mL or 250 mL often works fine if the recipe isn’t fussy.
- Baking with tight ratios: stick to the cup system the recipe writer used.
- Nutrition-label work: stick to 240 mL for 1 cup in U.S. labeling contexts.
- School or measurement problems: follow the definition given in the question or your course notes.
1 Cup In mL For Cooking And Baking With Less Guesswork
If you want one default that fits most U.S. recipe conversions, use 236.588 mL per cup. That’s the U.S. customary cup. It lines up with the familiar U.S. tablespoon and teaspoon system used in American recipes.
If you’re translating a recipe written in metric style, use 250 mL per cup. Many metric cups are built so halves and quarters land on clean numbers: 1/2 cup is 125 mL, 1/4 cup is 62.5 mL, and so on.
If your task is tied to U.S. serving sizes and label math, use 240 mL per cup. That choice comes straight from U.S. labeling rules, not from kitchen tradition. FDA nutrition labeling unit definitions is the clean reference for it.
Why You See More Than One “Correct” Answer
“Cup” is a name, not a single global unit. Different places picked different standards, then tools and recipes copied them.
On top of that, the U.S. uses two cup values in common life: one for kitchen measuring, one for labels. That split is why a search result might say 236.6 mL, another might say 240 mL, and a third might say 250 mL. Each can be right, depending on context.
There’s also an older British “imperial cup” that shows up in older references. It’s based on imperial fluid ounces and lands at 284.131 mL. You won’t meet it in modern UK packaging often, since the UK uses metric measures in most cooking.
Common Cup Standards Side By Side
If you’ve ever stared at a recipe comment section full of arguments, this is what’s sitting under the noise: people are using different cups.
Table 1 (after ~40% of article)
| Cup Type | mL Per Cup | Where You’ll See It |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. customary cup | 236.588 mL | Most U.S. recipes, U.S. measuring cup sets, many American cookbooks |
| U.S. legal cup (labeling) | 240 mL | U.S. Nutrition Facts serving sizes and label-based portion math |
| Metric cup | 250 mL | Australian and New Zealand recipes, many metric-style online recipes, some measuring jugs |
| Imperial cup (older) | 284.131 mL | Older references tied to imperial fluid ounces; not common in newer UK recipe writing |
| “Rice cooker cup” (device cup) | 180 mL (device standard) | Rice cookers and scoops packaged with them; meant for cooker ratios, not recipe cups |
| Coffee “cup” (appliance cup) | Varies (often 150–180 mL) | Coffee makers that label a carafe in “cups” that aren’t kitchen cups |
| Recipe shorthand cup | 240–250 mL (often used) | Some blogs and social videos that round to tidy numbers without stating a standard |
| Classroom-defined cup | Given in the problem | Worksheets and exams that define “cup” as part of the question |
Liquid Vs Dry Measuring Cups: The Part People Miss
Milliliters measure volume. A “cup” measures volume too. So it sounds like a clean swap. The snag is how you fill the cup and what’s inside it.
Why a dry cup can throw off a liquid conversion
Dry measuring cups are meant to be filled to the brim and leveled. Liquid measuring cups are meant to be filled to a line while the cup sits on a flat surface.
Use a dry cup for water and you can still get the right volume, but it’s easier to overfill. Use a liquid cup for flour and you’ll get a mess plus a measurement that depends on how you packed the flour.
When mL conversions feel “off” in baking
Some ingredients don’t behave. Flour compacts. Brown sugar clumps. Grated cheese traps air. Even if your cup-to-mL conversion is correct, the ingredient amount can still drift if the filling method changes.
If baking results keep wobbling, switch the recipe to grams when possible. Volume is quick. Weight is steady.
Rounding That Still Keeps Recipes On Track
You’ll see 236.588 mL written as 236.6 mL, 237 mL, or even 240 mL. Those are rounding choices.
If your recipe is written in cups and spoons, rounding to a whole milliliter won’t break it. A tablespoon is 15 mL, a teaspoon is 5 mL, and those steps are larger than the tiny decimal tail on 236.588.
If your recipe is written in metric with lots of mL and grams, stick to the metric cup the recipe expects. A metric author often builds the whole recipe around clean quarter-cup and half-cup values.
Fast Conversions You’ll Use A Lot
Most of the time you’re not converting 1 full cup. You’re converting half a cup, a third, or three-quarters. Here are the numbers that come up every week.
Table 2 (after ~60% of article)
| Cup Fraction | mL (U.S. Customary Cup) | mL (Metric Cup) |
|---|---|---|
| 1/4 cup | 59.147 mL | 62.5 mL |
| 1/3 cup | 78.863 mL | 83.333 mL |
| 1/2 cup | 118.294 mL | 125 mL |
| 2/3 cup | 157.725 mL | 166.667 mL |
| 3/4 cup | 177.441 mL | 187.5 mL |
| 1 cup | 236.588 mL | 250 mL |
| 1 1/2 cups | 354.882 mL | 375 mL |
| 2 cups | 473.176 mL | 500 mL |
Simple Conversion Method You Can Reuse
If you’re converting any number of cups to milliliters, the math is straight multiplication.
U.S. customary cup method
mL = cups × 236.588
Say your recipe calls for 2.5 cups. Multiply 2.5 by 236.588. You get 591.47 mL.
Metric cup method
mL = cups × 250
That same 2.5 cups becomes 625 mL with a metric cup.
U.S. labeling cup method
mL = cups × 240
This is the one used for U.S. label serving sizes. The legal definition sits in the federal labeling rule, so it’s the right pick for label math. FDA nutrition labeling unit definitions is a direct source.
Mini Checks That Prevent Recipe Slip-Ups
When a conversion goes wrong, it’s rarely the calculator. It’s the hidden cup type. These checks catch it early.
Check the teaspoon and tablespoon lines
If a recipe lists “1 cup = 16 tablespoons,” it’s leaning U.S. customary. If it lists “1 tablespoon = 20 mL,” it’s leaning Australian metric spoon measures, which often pair with a 250 mL cup.
Check the writer’s weight units
If the recipe uses Fahrenheit and ounces, it’s likely U.S.-based. If it uses Celsius and grams, it’s likely metric-based. Cups in a metric recipe often map to 250 mL.
Check the tool set you own
If you’re using a cup set with no mL marks, treat it as U.S. customary. If you’re using a jug that prints “1 cup” at 250 mL, stick with that jug’s standard for the whole recipe.
When Exactness Matters More
Some tasks punish tiny drifts. If you’re doing a lab dilution, a home-brewing recipe, candy stages, or a school assignment that grades your unit work, stick to the definition your task uses.
If your class notes point you to U.S. customary units, the U.S. cup value comes from the customary volume system. If your notes point you to metric cooking standards, the metric cup may be the intended one.
If you need a government measurement reference for U.S. customary unit tables, the National Institute of Standards and Technology publishes measurement tables in its Handbook 44 materials. NIST Handbook 44 Appendix C unit tables is a primary source used across weights-and-measures work.
A Quick Wrap-Up You Can Act On
If your recipe is American and written in cups, treat 1 cup as 236.588 mL. If you’re working from U.S. food labels, treat 1 cup as 240 mL. If the recipe is metric-style, treat 1 cup as 250 mL.
Pick one standard, then stick to it through the whole recipe. That one habit saves more dishes and more desserts than any fancy conversion chart.
References & Sources
- U.S. Electronic Code of Federal Regulations (eCFR).“21 CFR 101.9 — Nutrition labeling of food.”Defines U.S. nutrition-label volume units, including 1 cup = 240 mL for labeling use.
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).“NIST Handbook 44 (2024) Appendix C: General Tables of Units of Measurement.”Provides official unit tables used in weights-and-measures practice, supporting U.S. customary unit conversions.