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Cooking conversion
Grams of Almond Flour to Milliliters
How many milliliters of almond flour are in a given weight? Type a number of grams below to see the volume. Math uses almond flour's density of 0.406 g/mL.
Calculator
100 g of almond flour = 246.31 mL
Grams of Almond Flour to Milliliters Conversion Table
Common values for almond flour:
| Grams of almond flour | Milliliters |
|---|---|
| 10 g | 24.6305 mL |
| 25 g | 61.5764 mL |
| 50 g | 123.15 mL |
| 100 g | 246.31 mL |
| 150 g | 369.46 mL |
| 200 g | 492.61 mL |
| 250 g | 615.76 mL |
| 500 g | 1231.53 mL |
| 1000 g | 2463.05 mL |
How this works
Almond flour has a density of about 0.406 g/mL (king arthur baking: 1 cup = 96g). That means 1 mL of almond flour weighs 0.406 grams.
Milliliters = grams × 2.4631
Note: Blanched, finely ground.
Why a cup of almond flour doesn't always weigh the same
Volume measurements are forgiving in some ways and brutal in others. A cup of almond flour can vary by 10-20% in weight depending on how it's measured: spooned vs scooped, packed vs loose, sifted vs unsifted. The density figure used here (0.406 g/mL) matches the most common published recipe conventions, but if you're after baking precision, weighing on a kitchen scale is more accurate than measuring by volume.
Sourced from King Arthur Baking: 1 cup = 96g. Blanched, finely ground.
Volume vs weight in cooking
The American convention of measuring ingredients by volume (cups, tablespoons, teaspoons) is convenient but introduces variability that doesn't exist in weight-based recipes. Most professional bakers and bakeries weigh ingredients to within a gram because the structure of baked goods depends on precise ingredient ratios. For everyday cooking — soups, sauces, sautés — the volume-to-weight imprecision rarely matters. For baking that depends on rising or texture (cakes, breads, laminated doughs), it matters a lot.
The conversion
Multiplying the volume of almond flour by its density (0.406 g/mL) gives the weight in grams. The calculator at the top of this page does the math automatically; the formula box above shows the resulting linear factor for the specific volume and weight units selected here.
