Pressure Converter: Convert Between All Pressure Units
The Pressure Converter is a free online tool that lets you instantly convert pressure values between 15 units spanning scientific, engineering, meteorological, and medical applications. Whether you need to check tire pressure in psi, interpret a weather forecast in hPa, calculate hydraulic system loads in MPa, or read a vacuum gauge in Torr, this tool delivers high-precision results in real time with adjustable decimal places.
All conversions are performed client-side using Pascal (Pa) as the normalized base unit. Enter a value in any supported unit and every other unit updates simultaneously — no button press required. The "Show all unit conversions" option displays a grouped reference table across all four unit categories.
Supported Pressure Units
The converter covers 15 units grouped into four practical categories.
SI Units
- Pascal (Pa) — The SI base unit of pressure, defined as one Newton applied over one square meter. Used universally in scientific literature and as the reference point for all conversions in this tool.
- Kilopascal (kPa) — Equal to 1,000 Pa. Widely used for tire pressure in countries that have adopted metric units, fluid line pressures, and atmospheric pressure in aviation altimetry (standard sea-level pressure = 101.325 kPa).
- Megapascal (MPa) — Equal to 1,000,000 Pa. The standard unit for material yield strength, hydraulic cylinder pressures, and concrete compressive strength in civil engineering.
Atmospheric and Meteorological Units
- Bar (bar) — Exactly 100,000 Pa, or approximately 0.987 atm. Commonly used in European industrial settings, diving equipment ratings, and fluid pressure specifications where values near one atmosphere are typical.
- Millibar (mbar) — One thousandth of a bar, equivalent to 100 Pa. The traditional unit for atmospheric pressure in meteorology; surface pressure maps are often contoured in millibars.
- Standard Atmosphere (atm) — Defined as exactly 101,325 Pa. Represents the mean atmospheric pressure at sea level and is used as a reference point for many physical and chemical constants.
- Hectopascal (hPa) — Equal to 100 Pa and numerically identical to millibar. Adopted as the SI-compliant replacement for mbar in meteorology; standard sea-level pressure is 1013.25 hPa.
Engineering and Industrial Units
- PSI (psi) — Pounds-force per square inch, equal to 6894.757 Pa. The dominant pressure unit in the United States for everyday engineering: tire pressures, hydraulic systems, compressed air, and industrial fluid specifications are all routinely expressed in psi.
- PSF (psf) — Pounds-force per square foot, equal to 47.8803 Pa. Used in US structural engineering for snow loads, wind loads, and floor load capacities in building codes.
- Kilo-PSI (ksi) — 1,000 psi, equal to 6,894,757 Pa. Standard in US materials science for tensile strength, yield strength, and ultimate strength values of structural steel and alloys.
- Kilogram-force per cm² (kgf/cm²) — Also called the technical atmosphere (at), equal to 98,066.5 Pa. Appears in older European and Japanese engineering specifications and in some hydraulic equipment datasheets.
Vacuum and Scientific Units
- Torr — Defined as 1/760 of a standard atmosphere (≈ 133.322 Pa). Named after Evangelista Torricelli and universally used in vacuum science, low-pressure process chambers, and laboratory vacuum systems.
- Millimeter of Mercury (mmHg) — The pressure exerted by a 1 mm column of mercury under standard gravity (≈ 133.322 Pa). The traditional clinical unit for blood pressure and intraocular pressure: a healthy adult blood pressure reading of 120/80 means 120 mmHg systolic and 80 mmHg diastolic.
- Inch of Mercury (inHg) — Equal to 3,386.389 Pa. The standard unit for altimeter settings in US aviation, and still common in US weather reports for barometric pressure (standard sea-level pressure = 29.92 inHg).
- Dyne per Square Centimeter (dyn/cm²) — The CGS unit of pressure, equal to 0.1 Pa. Historically used in physics textbooks and in some fluid dynamics applications; largely superseded by Pascal in modern usage.
How Pressure Conversion Works
Every conversion in this tool is normalized through Pascal (Pa) in two steps. First, the input value is multiplied by the conversion factor of the source unit to obtain the equivalent value in Pascals. Then that Pa value is divided by the conversion factor of the target unit to produce the final result. This two-step approach ensures consistent accuracy for any pair of units without requiring a dedicated formula for each combination.
As an example, converting 29.92 inHg to kPa:
- 29.92 inHg × 3386.389 Pa/inHg = 101,342.9 Pa
- 101,342.9 Pa ÷ 1000 Pa/kPa = 101.343 kPa
Key Pressure Reference Values
- Standard atmosphere: 1 atm = 101,325 Pa = 1.01325 bar = 14.696 psi = 760 Torr = 29.92 inHg
- 1 bar = 100,000 Pa = 0.98692 atm = 14.504 psi = 750.06 Torr
- 1 psi = 6894.757 Pa = 0.068948 bar = 0.068046 atm = 51.715 Torr
- 1 kPa = 1000 Pa = 0.01 bar = 0.14504 psi = 7.5006 Torr
- 1 MPa = 1,000,000 Pa = 10 bar = 145.04 psi = 9.8692 atm
- 1 Torr ≈ 1 mmHg ≈ 133.322 Pa = 0.0013332 bar = 0.019337 psi
Practical Applications of Pressure Conversion
Pressure measurement arises across nearly every scientific and industrial discipline. Here are common scenarios where unit conversion is essential:
- Tire and Vehicle Pressure: European vehicles specify tire pressure in bar or kPa; American vehicles use psi. Converting between these is a daily practical need, especially when crossing borders or reading international repair manuals. A typical passenger tire inflated to 32 psi equals approximately 2.21 bar or 220.6 kPa.
- Weather Forecasting: Barometric pressure drives weather prediction. Meteorologists use hPa or mbar for surface pressure maps, while US broadcast weather reports quote inHg. Understanding that a falling barometer dropping from 1013 hPa to 990 hPa signals an approaching storm requires fluency in these units.
- Medical and Clinical Use: Blood pressure, intraocular pressure, and cerebrospinal fluid pressure are all measured in mmHg. Anaesthetic gas pressures and ventilator settings may be specified in cmH₂O, Pa, or kPa depending on the equipment manufacturer and country.
- Aviation: Pilot altimeters are set using inHg in North America and hPa elsewhere. When flying internationally or coordinating with foreign ATC, converting between these two standards is critical for safety.
- Hydraulics and Industrial Equipment: High-pressure hydraulic systems (up to 700 bar / 10,000 psi) and pneumatic lines are often specified in psi in American manuals and bar or MPa in European or ISO standards. Engineers working across both traditions need accurate conversion.
- Vacuum Technology: Vacuum systems used in semiconductor fabrication, freeze-drying, and scientific instruments describe pressures in Torr or mbar at medium vacuum, down to Pa or mPa for high and ultra-high vacuum ranges. Converting between these helps compare equipment specifications from different manufacturers.
- Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine: Divers work with pressures described in bar, atm, or psi depending on their training system. A diver at 30 meters depth experiences about 4 atm absolute pressure (1 atm atmospheric + 3 atm water column). Converting to Pa or psi for equipment ratings requires a precise tool.
Tips for Using the Pressure Converter
- Enable "Show all unit conversions" to display every supported unit at once, grouped by category. This is ideal for creating quick reference tables or comparing equipment specifications from different regional standards.
- Increase the decimal places setting when working with precise scientific or vacuum measurements where rounding could introduce significant relative error.
- Use the Swap button to immediately reverse a conversion — for example, to check that a Pa-to-psi result is correct by converting back and verifying you recover the original value.
- The conversion history panel records your last 10 conversions during the session. Click any history entry to restore those values as the current input.
- For very large values (such as converting Pa to dyn/cm² for high pressures) the tool automatically switches to scientific notation to keep the display readable and unambiguous.