How Much Is 0.25 Pounds of Brown Sugar in Cups?
0.25 pounds of brown sugar equals 0.52 cups. Brown sugar has a density of 220g per cup. A lighter ingredient like flour (125g/cup) would fill more volume at the same weight, which is why ingredient-specific conversions matter.
Formula and Step-by-Step
- Start with 0.25 pounds of brown sugar
- Convert pounds to grams: 0.25 × 453.59 = 113.40g
- 1 cup of brown sugar = 220g
- 113.40g ÷ 220g/cup = 0.52 cups
The same formula works for any amount. Multiply (or divide) by the density, then convert units as needed.
Measuring Tip
If your brown sugar has hardened, microwave it with a damp paper towel for 20 seconds. Hard brown sugar is still the same weight but impossible to measure by volume.
Brown Sugar at Different Amounts
How brown sugar scales across common pounds measurements. Your amount (0.25 pounds) is highlighted.
Other Amounts of Brown Sugar
| Pounds | US Cups | Metric Cup | Imperial Cup |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.25 pounds | 0.52 cups | 0.49 cups | 0.43 cups |
| 0.5 pounds | 1.03 cups | 0.98 cups | 0.86 cups |
| 0.75 pounds | 1.55 cups | 1.46 cups | 1.29 cups |
| 1 pound | 2.06 cups | 1.95 cups | 1.72 cups |
| 1.5 pounds | 3.09 cups | 2.93 cups | 2.58 cups |
| 2 pounds | 4.12 cups | 3.90 cups | 3.43 cups |
| 3 pounds | 6.19 cups | 5.85 cups | 5.15 cups |
| 4 pounds | 8.25 cups | 7.80 cups | 6.87 cups |
| 5 pounds | 10.31 cups | 9.76 cups | 8.58 cups |
| 10 pounds | 20.62 cups | 19.51 cups | 17.17 cups |
Understanding the Units
What is a Pound?
The abbreviation "lb" comes from the Latin word "libra." One pound equals exactly 453.59237 grams. For rough mental math, 1 pound is slightly less than half a kilogram.
What is a Cup?
There are three cup standards used worldwide. The US cup (236.588 ml) is used in American recipes. The metric cup (250 ml) is standard in Australia, New Zealand, and some parts of Asia. The imperial cup (284.131 ml) appears in older British and Canadian recipes. A metric cup holds about 5.7% more than a US cup, while an imperial cup holds about 20% more. Using the wrong standard can noticeably affect a recipe.