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The Medication Unit Converter translates pharmaceutical doses between mg (milligrams), mcg/μg (micrograms), mL/cc (milliliters/cubic centimeters), IU (International Units), and grain (gr) — the units that most commonly appear on prescription labels, syringes, and dose calculations. Most conversions are deterministic: 1 mg = 1000 mcg, 1 mL = 1 cm³ (cc), 1 grain = 64.79891 mg (often rounded to 65 mg in clinical practice or 60 mg in pharmacopeias). IU (International Unit) conversions are biologically defined per substance — there is no single factor. For vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), 1 IU = 0.025 mcg. For vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol natural form), 1 IU = 0.67 mg. For vitamin A (retinol equivalents), 1 IU = 0.3 mcg. Insulin is also measured in IU but has no mass equivalence used clinically. Always check the drug's specific IU definition; this calculator provides common reference values for vitamins. The grain (gr) unit comes from apothecary measurement, still occasionally seen on old prescriptions and legacy drug formulations (aspirin 5 gr = 325 mg, phenobarbital, codeine, thyroid extract). The pharmacy standard is 64.79891 mg per grain, but the older US Pharmacopeia rounded to 60 mg for therapeutic equivalence — this minor difference rarely affects safety because grain-dosed drugs have wide therapeutic windows. Why unit confusion causes harm: A famous medication error category is the mg/mcg confusion — administering 1000× too much by mistaking microgram dose for milligram (or vice versa). Pediatric and elderly patients are especially vulnerable. Always verify converted doses with a pharmacist before administering, particularly for high-risk medications (insulin, opioids, chemotherapeutics, anticoagulants).
mcg = mg × 1000; grain → mg = grain × 64.79891; IU → mass: substance-specific
- 1Step 1 — Enter the dose amount as shown on your prescription label or syringe
- 2Step 2 — Choose the source unit (the unit currently on the label)
- 3Step 3 — Choose the target unit (the unit you need for your purpose, e.g., comparing to another product)
- 4Step 4 — For IU conversions, select the specific drug or vitamin since each has its own IU-to-mass relationship
- 5Step 5 — Calculator applies the appropriate conversion factor and returns the equivalent amount
- 6Step 6 — Output displays the converted value with caregiver-friendly precision (typically 2–3 significant figures)
- 7Step 7 — Verify the converted dose with your pharmacist before administration, especially for high-risk medications
Thyroid medication is often labeled in mcg; some pharmacies use mg — easy source of confusion
0.5 mg × 1000 = 500 mcg. Always confirm against the prescription.
mL and cc are numerically equivalent (1 mL = 1 cm³). Notation differs by region; quantity is the same.
5 × 64.79891 = 323.99 mg, which rounds to the modern 325 mg aspirin tablet.
FDA changed supplement labeling to mcg in 2020 but IU still appears widely
2000 × 0.025 = 50 mcg. Vitamin D3 IU definition: 1 IU = 0.025 mcg cholecalciferol.
Patient dose verification before administration
Caregiver medication management for elderly parents
Reading old prescriptions written in grain units
International medication comparison (US vs Europe formulations)
Pediatric dose calculation cross-check
Supplement label reading after FDA mcg/IU labeling change
Is mL the same as cc?
Numerically identical. 1 mL = 1 cm³ = 1 cc. The notation differs: mL is the modern SI volume unit, cc (cubic centimeter) is the older medical notation still common in syringes and physician orders. Use them interchangeably.
Why doesn't IU convert to one specific mass?
IU measures biological activity, not mass. Different molecules have different potencies per mass, so the IU-to-mass ratio is defined separately for each substance: vitamin D 1 IU = 0.025 mcg, vitamin E 1 IU = 0.67 mg (natural) or 0.9 mg (synthetic), vitamin A 1 IU = 0.3 mcg retinol equivalents. Insulin uses IU with no clinical mass equivalent.
How do I avoid mg/mcg confusion errors?
Always read the label carefully and verify against the prescription. The most dangerous errors are 1000× — administering a milligram amount when a microgram was prescribed (or vice versa). Best practices: never reconstitute from one unit to another without independent verification, use clear handwriting that distinguishes 'mg' from 'mcg' (avoid 'μg' which can be misread), and use a pharmacist double-check for high-risk meds.
What about ounces and tablespoons for liquid medications?
Avoid kitchen measurements — they're imprecise. A 'teaspoon' from a flatware drawer can hold 3–7 mL. Always use the calibrated dosing syringe or cup provided with the medication. If lost, ask your pharmacy for a replacement — most provide free dosing tools.
Are weight-based pediatric doses different?
Yes — pediatric doses are typically calculated as mg per kg body weight. For example, ibuprofen 10 mg/kg means a 20-kg child gets 200 mg. Some medications use mg/m² (body surface area), especially in oncology. This calculator handles unit conversion only — dose calculation requires the prescribing physician.
Tip Pro
Always double-check unit conversions with a pharmacist before administering a converted dose, especially for high-risk medications (insulin, opioids, anticoagulants, chemo). Pharmacists are happy to verify dose calculations; calling is free and prevents the deadliest category of medication errors.