Convert mL to tsp across all three teaspoon standards with fraction display and reference table
Whether you are scaling a recipe, measuring liquid medication, or converting a foreign recipe that uses milliliters, knowing how many teaspoons are in a given volume of milliliters is one of the most common kitchen calculations people face every day. The challenge is that there is not just one definition of a teaspoon — there are three internationally recognized standards, and the difference between them can matter in precision cooking or pharmaceutical dosing. Our ML to Teaspoons Converter handles all three standards at once, shows you the nearest kitchen fraction so you can grab the right measuring spoon, and lets you convert in either direction with a single click. Milliliters (mL) are the universal scientific unit for small liquid volumes. One milliliter equals one cubic centimeter and is one thousandth of a liter. Nearly every medical dosing instruction, nutrition facts label, and scientific protocol uses milliliters because of their precision and international standardization. Teaspoons, on the other hand, are a traditional kitchen unit whose exact size evolved differently in the United States, the United Kingdom, and metrication-era countries. The US Customary teaspoon is the most common standard in North American recipes. It is officially defined by the US Food and Drug Administration and the National Institute of Standards and Technology as exactly 4.92892159375 milliliters — precisely one third of a US tablespoon and one sixth of a US fluid ounce. If you have a recipe from a US cookbook, a US food blog, or a US nutrition label, the teaspoon measurements are based on this standard. The Metric teaspoon is used in medicine, nutrition labeling, and the majority of international recipes. It is defined as exactly 5 milliliters, making the math simpler: 2 teaspoons equals 10 mL, 3 teaspoons equals 15 mL, and so on. This is the standard used on prescription medication labels, over-the-counter dosing cups, and oral syringes worldwide. When your doctor says give your child one teaspoon of ibuprofen suspension, they mean exactly 5 mL using a calibrated measuring device — not a household spoon. The Imperial or UK traditional teaspoon is approximately 5.91939 milliliters, making it roughly 20 percent larger than the US Customary teaspoon. Old British and Commonwealth recipes often use this standard. If you find that a UK recipe produces results that seem too strong or too weak compared to your expectations, the teaspoon size difference may be the cause. Understanding which standard applies to your situation is critical. For baking and cooking with US recipes, use the US Customary standard. For medicine dosing, always use the Metric standard and a calibrated measuring device. For older UK or Commonwealth recipes, use the Imperial standard. Our converter shows all three results simultaneously in the dual-standard display, so you can compare at a glance. Fraction display is another key feature of this converter. In the real world, measuring spoons come in increments of one eighth of a teaspoon: 1/8 tsp, 1/4 tsp, 1/2 tsp, 3/4 tsp, and 1 tsp are the standard set. Our converter rounds your decimal result to the nearest 1/8 teaspoon increment and displays it as a human-readable kitchen fraction like "1/2 tsp" or "1-3/4 tsp", so you know exactly which spoon to reach for without doing mental arithmetic. The bidirectional conversion means you can enter either milliliters or teaspoons and get the other direction computed automatically. This is useful when a recipe gives quantities in teaspoons but you need milliliters for a medical device, or when a supplement bottle lists doses in mL and you want to visualize the teaspoon equivalent. The swap button flips the input direction while carrying over the computed value so you do not lose your work. The reference table provides a quick lookup for the most common cooking and dosing volumes from 1 mL to 100 mL, showing all three standards and the nearest kitchen fraction simultaneously. You can export this table as a CSV file to keep a printed copy in your kitchen or pharmacy drawer, or print the full results directly from the browser.
Understanding Teaspoon Standards
What Is a Teaspoon?
A teaspoon is a unit of volume historically used in cooking and pharmacy. Its size originated from actual silver teaspoons used for stirring tea in 18th and 19th century Britain, which varied in size by manufacturer and region. Standardization efforts in the 20th century produced three distinct official definitions. The US Customary teaspoon (4.929 mL) is defined by NIST and FDA regulations. The Metric teaspoon (5 mL exactly) was adopted internationally alongside metrication for use in medicine and nutrition labeling. The Imperial UK teaspoon (~5.919 mL) descends from the British Imperial system and is used in older Commonwealth recipes. Modern measuring spoon sets sold in the US are calibrated to the 4.929 mL US Customary standard.
How Are the Conversions Calculated?
Each teaspoon standard has an exact conversion factor. For US Customary: tsp = mL ÷ 4.92892159375 (or mL = tsp × 4.92892159375). For Metric: tsp = mL ÷ 5 (or mL = tsp × 5). For Imperial/UK: tsp = mL ÷ 5.91939029372. These factors are mathematically exact — they derive from the legal definitions of each unit system. The fraction approximation takes the decimal tsp result and finds the nearest value in the standard set of measuring spoon increments: 1/8, 1/4, 3/8, 1/2, 5/8, 3/4, 7/8, 1, 1-1/4, 1-1/2 tsp, and so on. This rounding is intentional — physical measuring spoons are only accurate to 1/8 tsp increments.
Why Does the Standard Matter?
Choosing the wrong standard leads to real errors. In baking, using the Imperial teaspoon (5.92 mL) instead of the US teaspoon (4.93 mL) for a recipe calling for 1 teaspoon of baking soda adds about 20% more leavening than intended, which can cause cakes to over-rise and collapse. In medicine, the difference between standards is more serious: household teaspoons have been measured in research to vary between 3 mL and 7 mL, which is why the FDA and WHO both recommend calibrated measuring devices for all liquid medications. The medical standard is always the Metric 5 mL teaspoon, and using a household teaspoon for dosing can result in under-dosing or overdosing, particularly dangerous for children.
Limitações e Notas Práticas
This converter provides mathematically exact unit conversions based on the legal definitions of each standard. However, several practical limitations apply. First, physical measuring spoons are not perfectly calibrated — even quality sets can vary by a few percent from nominal values. Second, liquid ingredients like honey, oil, and syrup behave differently in a spoon than water due to surface tension and viscosity; volume measurements of these ingredients are less precise in practice. Third, the fraction approximation rounds to the nearest 1/8 tsp, which introduces up to 0.0625 tsp of rounding error. For scientific or pharmaceutical applications requiring high precision, always use a calibrated syringe or graduated cylinder rather than measuring spoons.
Conversion Formulas
Milliliters to US Teaspoons
tsp = mL / 4.929
Divide the milliliter value by 4.92892159 to get US customary teaspoons. This is the standard used in American recipes and measuring spoon sets.
Milliliters to Metric Teaspoons
tsp = mL / 5
Divide the milliliter value by 5 to get metric teaspoons. This is the medical standard used worldwide for medication dosing.
Teaspoons to Milliliters
mL = tsp × 4.929
Multiply the teaspoon value by the appropriate factor (4.929 for US, 5 for metric, 5.919 for Imperial) to convert back to milliliters.
Medical Standard
1 tsp = 5 mL (medical)
In all pharmaceutical and medical contexts, 1 teaspoon is defined as exactly 5 mL. Always use a calibrated measuring device for medication dosing.
Reference Tables
Common Milliliter to Teaspoon Conversions
Pre-calculated conversions for frequently used milliliter values across all three teaspoon standards.
| Mililitros | US tsp | Metric tsp | Imperial tsp | Kitchen Fraction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.203 | 0.200 | 0.169 | ~1/4 tsp |
| 2.5 | 0.507 | 0.500 | 0.422 | ~1/2 tsp |
| 5 | 1.014 | 1.000 | 0.845 | 1 tsp |
| 7.5 | 1.522 | 1.500 | 1.267 | 1-1/2 tsp |
| 10 | 2.029 | 2.000 | 1.689 | 2 tsp |
| 15 | 3.043 | 3.000 | 2.534 | 3 tsp (1 tbsp) |
| 30 | 6.087 | 6.000 | 5.068 | 6 tsp (2 tbsp) |
Common Medical Dosing Conversions
Standard medication dose volumes expressed in milliliters and metric teaspoons, as used on prescription labels and dosing cups.
| Dose Description | Mililitros | Metric Teaspoons | Common Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Half teaspoon | 2.5 | 0.5 | Pediatric doses |
| One teaspoon | 5 | 1 | Standard adult liquid dose |
| One and a half teaspoons | 7.5 | 1.5 | Moderate adult dose |
| Two teaspoons | 10 | 2 | Higher adult dose |
| One tablespoon | 15 | 3 | Maximum single liquid dose |
Worked Examples
Convert 15 mL Cough Syrup to Teaspoons
A cough syrup label says the adult dose is 15 mL. How many teaspoons is that?
Use the medical standard: 1 tsp = 5 mL
Apply the formula: tsp = mL / 5
Calculate: 15 / 5 = 3 metric teaspoons
Note: 3 teaspoons = 1 tablespoon
15 mL = 3 metric teaspoons (1 tablespoon)
Convert 2.5 Teaspoons to mL for a Recipe
A US recipe calls for 2.5 teaspoons of vanilla extract. How many milliliters should you measure?
Identify the formula: mL = tsp × 4.92892159
Substitute the value: 2.5 × 4.92892159
Calculate: 2.5 × 4.92892159 = 12.32 mL
2.5 US teaspoons = 12.32 mL
How to Use the ML to Teaspoons Converter
Choose Your Use Case
Select Cooking or Medicine/Dosing at the top. This changes which preset buttons appear below. For medicine, a safety warning will also appear reminding you to use a calibrated measuring device instead of a household spoon.
Select Your Teaspoon Standard
Pick US Customary (4.929 mL — for US recipes and nutrition labels), Metric (5 mL — for medicine and international recipes), or Imperial/UK (5.919 mL — for British and Commonwealth recipes). The converter shows all three standards simultaneously in the dual-standard section.
Insira Seu Valor
Type a milliliter value in the mL field to convert to teaspoons, or type a teaspoon value in the tsp field to convert to milliliters. The conversion happens instantly as you type. Use the arrow button in the middle to swap the direction and carry the computed value over.
Leia Seus Resultados
The main result shows the converted value plus the nearest kitchen fraction for easy measuring. The dual-standard chart compares all three teaspoon definitions side by side. Use the Export CSV button to download a reference table, or Print to save the results for your kitchen.
Perguntas Frequentes
How many teaspoons are in 5 mL?
Exactly 1 metric teaspoon. The metric teaspoon is defined as precisely 5 milliliters, so 5 mL = 1 tsp with zero rounding error. This is the standard used on medicine dosing cups, oral syringes, and nutrition facts labels worldwide. In US Customary terms, 5 mL equals approximately 1.0144 teaspoons, since the US teaspoon is defined as 4.92892 mL — very close to 5 mL but not exactly. For cooking purposes the difference is negligible; for pharmaceutical dosing, the metric 5 mL standard is always used.
Is 1 teaspoon exactly 5 mL?
It depends on which teaspoon standard you use. The Metric teaspoon used in medicine and international nutrition labeling is defined as exactly 5 mL. However, the US Customary teaspoon — used in American recipes and measuring spoon sets — is defined as 4.92892159375 mL, about 1.4% less than 5 mL. The Imperial/UK teaspoon is approximately 5.919 mL, about 18.4% more than 5 mL. For everyday cooking the difference rarely matters, but for precision baking or medication dosing, you should know which standard applies to your situation.
How many mL is a teaspoon of medicine?
A medical teaspoon is exactly 5 mL. All pharmaceutical dosing instructions, oral syringe calibrations, and dosing cup markings in the US and internationally use the metric teaspoon of 5 mL. The FDA and WHO both explicitly recommend that liquid medications be measured using a calibrated oral syringe or dosing cup, not a kitchen teaspoon. Household teaspoons have been measured in studies to vary between 3 mL and 7 mL depending on the spoon's size and shape, making them unsafe for drug dosing. Common pediatric doses: 2.5 mL = 1/2 tsp, 5 mL = 1 tsp, 7.5 mL = 1.5 tsp, 10 mL = 2 tsp.
Why are there three different teaspoon sizes?
The three teaspoon standards evolved from different historical measurement traditions in the US, UK, and international metrication. The US Customary teaspoon (4.929 mL) is derived from the US fluid ounce system and was codified by NIST as exactly 1/6 fluid ounce. The Imperial teaspoon (5.919 mL) comes from the British Imperial system and is 1/3 of a British tablespoon. The Metric teaspoon (5 mL) was adopted by international bodies for medicine and nutrition labeling because its value is a round number of milliliters, making it easier to work with in metric countries. Today all three coexist in different contexts.
How do I convert mL to teaspoons for a recipe?
For most US recipes, divide the milliliter amount by 4.929 to get US teaspoons. Quick reference: 2.5 mL ≈ 1/2 tsp, 5 mL ≈ 1 tsp, 7.5 mL ≈ 1.5 tsp, 10 mL ≈ 2 tsp, 15 mL ≈ 3 tsp (1 tablespoon). For UK or Commonwealth recipes, divide by 5.919 instead. For recipes labeled with nutrition facts (using metric teaspoon), divide by 5 exactly. Our converter does this math automatically and also shows the nearest kitchen fraction so you can grab the right measuring spoon without additional calculations.
What is the fraction display and how is it calculated?
The fraction display shows the nearest practical measuring spoon increment for your converted teaspoon result. Standard measuring spoon sets come in increments of 1/8 teaspoon: 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, and 1 teaspoon are the most common spoons. Our converter takes your decimal teaspoon result and rounds it to the nearest 1/8 tsp value, then displays it as a readable kitchen fraction like '1/2 tsp' or '1-3/4 tsp'. This avoids the impractical result of '0.507 tsp' and tells you to use 'about 1/2 tsp' instead — which is all the precision a measuring spoon can actually deliver.
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