Convert Microgram to Ounce (µg → oz)
The microgram is used in pharmacology, environmental science, and trace-element nutritional analysis.
Microgram to Ounce Conversion Table
10 common values| Microgram | Ounce |
|---|---|
| 1 µg | 3.527 × 10^-8 oz |
| 5 µg | 1.764e-7 oz |
| 10 µg | 3.527e-7 oz |
| 25 µg | 8.818e-7 oz |
| 50 µg | 0.000001764 oz |
| 100 µg | 0.000003527 oz |
| 250 µg | 0.000008818 oz |
| 500 µg | 0.00001764 oz |
| 1,000 µg | 0.00003527 oz |
| 5,000 µg | 0.000176 oz |
How to Convert Microgram to Ounce Manually
Step by StepConverting micrograms to ounces is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in microgramsStart with the number of micrograms (µg) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 3.527 × 10^-8The conversion factor from µg to oz is 3.527 × 10^-8. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in ouncesThe result is your value in ounces (oz).
Formula
Multiply the value in micrograms by 3.527 × 10^-8. For the reverse direction, multiply by 28,349,523.
oz = µg × 3.527 × 10^-8µg = oz × 28,349,523Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 µg = 0.001 mg = 1/1,000,000 g.
- Some older labels write "mcg" instead of µg — both mean the same thing.
- For very small doses prefer µg to avoid decimal confusion (0.025 mg vs. 25 µg).
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Treating mcg and mg as equivalent on older prescription pads.
- Typing "mg" when the intended unit is "µg" — a 1000× overdose.
- Reading µg as g without the prefix — a 1-million-fold error.
About Microgram and Ounce
What is the Microgram?
The microgram equals one millionth of a gram (10⁻⁶ g) and is the standard unit for very small mass measurements in pharmacology, environmental science, and trace-element nutrition. The Greek letter µ (mu) represents the SI prefix 'micro' (one millionth). Vitamin B12 daily intake is around 2.4 µg, and the lethal dose of botulinum toxin is in the nanogram-to-microgram range, making it one of the most potent biological substances known. The microgram is critical in air-quality monitoring (PM concentrations in µg/m³), trace-mineral supplements (selenium, iodine), and pharmaceutical compounding. It relates to the milligram (1,000 µg = 1 mg) and the nanogram (1,000 ng = 1 µg). Environmental regulators set legal limits on heavy metals (lead, arsenic) in drinking water in micrograms per liter.
- Vitamin D, A and K dosing
- Trace metal content in food and water
- Hormone replacement therapy dosing
Vitamin D adult dose: 15–20 µg/day. Selenium RDA: 55 µg/day. Many thyroid medications are dosed in µg.
What is the Ounce?
The ounce equals exactly 28.349523125 grams or 1/16 of a pound. The word derives from the Latin 'uncia,' meaning one twelfth (the original Roman ounce was 1/12 of a Roman pound). The modern avoirdupois ounce, used for everyday weights in the United States and the United Kingdom, replaced the older Tower and Troy systems. It is the standard unit for American kitchen recipes (where 'ounce' refers to weight, distinct from the fluid ounce of volume), postal rates, package sizes (a 12-oz can of soda), and boxing-glove weights. Precious metals like gold and silver use the troy ounce (31.103 g), about 10% heavier than the avoirdupois ounce. The ounce relates to the pound (16 oz = 1 lb), the gram (1 oz ≈ 28.35 g), and the grain (1 oz = 437.5 grains).
- American and British cooking recipes
- Food packaging in the US
- Precious metals (troy ounce = 31.10 g, different from avoirdupois)
A US tin of tuna is 5 oz (142 g). A Starbucks grande coffee is 16 fl oz (473 ml). Gold is traded in troy ounces (31.10 g).