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Egg Yolks Cups to Ounces

Convert any amount of egg yolks between cups and ounces. 1 cup of egg yolks equals 8.92 oz. Use the calculator for custom amounts, or choose an amount below.

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8.92
See full breakdown for 1 cup of egg yolks
Result using all cup standards info
8.92 oz (US) 9.43 oz (Metric Cup) 10.72 oz (Imperial Cup)

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Popular Recipe Amounts

Common egg yolks measurements found in recipes.

Other Units for Egg Yolks

Convert egg yolks from cups to other units. Each link has its own calculator and conversion amounts.

Similar Ingredients

Measuring Tip

One large egg white weighs approximately 30g and one large egg yolk weighs approximately 17g. Weighing separated eggs is more reliable than counting, since individual eggs vary in size.

Understanding the Units

What is a Cup?

In US cooking, a cup measures volume, not weight. One standard US cup holds 236.588 ml of liquid. Because different ingredients have different densities, a cup of one ingredient can weigh very differently from a cup of another.

What is an Ounce?

An ounce (oz) is a US customary unit of weight equal to 28.3495 grams or 1/16 of a pound. In cooking, "ounces" refers to weight (avoirdupois ounces), not fluid ounces which measure volume.

Frequently Asked Questions

1 cup of egg yolks is 8.92 oz. The conversion depends on the density of egg yolks and scales proportionally for any amount.

The most accurate way is to weigh egg yolks on a kitchen scale, since individual eggs vary in size. If you are measuring by volume, pour into the measuring cup on a flat surface and read the level at eye height. Egg yolks are liquid and settle naturally, so volume measurements are reasonably consistent.

Egg sizes vary naturally, so the cups to ounces result can differ by 5-10% between individual eggs. This conversion uses large eggs as the standard. For carton egg yolks, the density is very consistent.

Weighing is more consistent than volume measuring. A cup of egg yolks can vary by 10-20% depending on how it's scooped, packed, or leveled. Weighing gives the same result every time, which is especially important in baking where precision affects texture and rise.