Self-Rising Flour
Metric Cup to Gram
US Cup (236ml)
123.0g
Metric Cup (250ml)
130.0g
A US cup (236.59ml) of self-rising flour weighs 123g, while a metric cup (250ml) weighs 130g. That's a 5.7% difference - make sure you know which cup size your recipe uses!
Self-Rising Flour — Quick Reference
Common metric cup to gram conversions
| Metric Cup | Gram |
|---|---|
| ¼ cup | 33g |
| ⅓ cup | 43g |
| ½ cup | 65g |
| ⅔ cup | 87g |
| ¾ cup | 98g |
| 1 cup | 130g |
| 1½ cups | 195g |
| 2 cups | 260g |
Based on self-rising flour density of 0.52 g/ml (spooned method). Source: USDA FoodData Central.
Understanding Self-Rising Flour Conversions
The Math Behind This Conversion
To convert 1 metric cup of self-rising flour to gram, we use the density of self-rising flour (0.52 g/ml). A metric cup contains 250ml, so 1 metric cup equals 250ml. Multiplying by the density: 250ml × 0.52 g/ml = 130g.
US vs Metric Cups: Why It Matters
When converting self-rising flour, the cup size matters significantly. A US cup (236.6ml) of self-rising flour weighs 123g, while a metric cup (250ml) weighs 130g—a difference of 7g (6%). If you're following a recipe from a different country, using the wrong cup size could affect your results. American recipes use US cups, while recipes from Australia, UK, and most other countries use metric cups.
Measurement Tip
For accurate self-rising flour measurements, spoon the flour into your measuring cup and level it with a straight edge. Never scoop directly from the bag—this compacts the flour and can give you up to 30% more than intended, which will make your baked goods dense and dry.
About Our Data
The density value of 0.52 g/ml for self-rising flour is from the USDA FoodData Central database (ID: 169761). This measurement was taken with self-rising flour spooned into the measuring cup and leveled. Different measurement methods affect the density: sifted (0.44 g/ml), packed (0.6 g/ml).