330 Grams to Cups Conversion

MeasurementsCalculator.com 330 Grams to Cups Ingredient Conversion Calculator

330 Grams to Cups Ingredient Conversion Calculator

How many cups is 330 grams in cups? Since a gram measures weight and a cup measures volume, the cup amount hinges on the ingredient’s density. For water, 330 grams equals approximately 1.3948 cups. For all-purpose flour, the volume is closer to 2.64 cups, and for granulated sugar, approximately 1.65 cups.

Open the 330 grams to cups calculator above to get the exact cup volume for any of 80+ ingredients, or browse the detailed reference tables below.

Measurementscalculator.com Converting 330 Grams to Cups

How to Convert 330 Grams to Cups

Step 1: Identify Your Ingredient First

Different from a simple unit-to-unit conversion, grams-to-cups isn’t a single fixed formula. The answer for 330 grams depends entirely on what you’re measuring. The general formula is:

Cups = 330 ÷ (grams per cup)

Where the divisor is the ingredient’s density expressed in grams per US cup (g/cup). Note that this is division — to find cups when you know grams, you divide weight by the density factor. The opposite direction (cups to grams) uses multiplication.

Quick mental shortcut: For water and milk, the divisor is roughly 240 (water is 236.59, milk is 240). So 330 grams of water is approximately 330 ÷ 240 = 1.3948 cups — good enough for everyday cooking.

Step 2: Worked Example with Water

Water is the simplest case. One US cup holds 236.59 mL of water, and water has a density of 1 g/mL, so:

Cups of water = 330 ÷ 236.59 = 1.3948 cups

That means 330 grams of water equals about 1.3948 US cups. Milk is very close at 1.375 cups.

Step 3: Worked Example with Flour

Goal: Convert 330 grams of all-purpose flour to cups

1. Look up the flour density factor:

All-purpose flour ≈ 125 g/cup

2. Divide:

330 ÷ 125 = 2.64 cups

Answer: 330 grams of all-purpose flour ≈ 2.64 cups.

Step 4: Cheat Sheet for 330 Grams

  • Water: 330 g ≈ 1.3948 cups
  • Milk: 330 g ≈ 1.375 cups
  • All-purpose flour: 330 g ≈ 2.64 cups
  • Bread flour: 330 g ≈ 2.5385 cups
  • Cake flour: 330 g ≈ 2.8947 cups
  • Granulated sugar: 330 g ≈ 1.65 cups
  • Brown sugar (packed): 330 g ≈ 1.5 cups
  • Powdered sugar: 330 g ≈ 2.75 cups
  • Butter: 330 g ≈ 1.4537 cups
  • Vegetable oil: 330 g ≈ 1.5138 cups
  • Honey: 330 g ≈ 0.9706 cups
  • Maple syrup: 330 g ≈ 1.0248 cups
  • Table salt: 330 g ≈ 1.2088 cups
  • Baking powder: 330 g ≈ 1.7188 cups
  • Baking soda: 330 g ≈ 1.5 cups
  • Cocoa powder: 330 g ≈ 3.3 cups
  • Cornstarch: 330 g ≈ 2.5781 cups
  • Rolled oats: 330 g ≈ 3.6667 cups
  • Uncooked rice: 330 g ≈ 1.65 cups

Cup size matters: A US cup is 236.588 mL, a metric cup is 250 mL, and a UK imperial cup is 284 mL. The numbers on this page assume a US cup — the standard for most American recipes. For metric cups, multiply the US cup result by approximately 0.946; for UK imperial cups, multiply by approximately 0.833.

330 Grams to Cups Conversion Chart for Common Ingredients

330 Grams to Cups Ingredient Conversion Chart

330 Grams to Cups Quick Reference Chart Ingredient Cups per 330 Grams Water 1.3948 cups Milk 1.375 cups Heavy Cream 1.4224 cups Vegetable Oil 1.5138 cups All-Purpose Flour 2.64 cups Whole Wheat Flour 2.75 cups Granulated Sugar 1.65 cups Brown Sugar (packed) 1.5 cups Powdered Sugar 2.75 cups Honey 0.9706 cups Maple Syrup 1.0248 cups Butter 1.4537 cups Salt (Table) 1.2088 cups Baking Powder 1.7188 cups Baking Soda 1.5 cups Cocoa Powder 3.3 cups Ground Coffee 4.125 cups Cornstarch 2.5781 cups Rolled Oats 3.6667 cups Uncooked Rice 1.65 cups Note: Values are approximate and may vary by brand, packing method, or humidity. © Measurements Calculator
Download Chart (PNG)

Measurementscalculator.com 330 Grams Conversion Table

330 Grams Converted to Other Units

Unit Value Notes
US Cups (water-based) 1.3948 cups Average reference
Milliliters (water) 330 mL For water, 1 g = 1 mL
Tablespoons (water) 22.317 tbsp 1 tbsp ≈ 14.79 g of water
Teaspoons (water) 66.95 tsp 1 tsp ≈ 4.93 g of water
Fluid Ounces (water) 11.158 fl oz 1 US fl oz ≈ 29.57 g water
Pints (water) 0.6974 pints 1 US pint ≈ 473.18 g water
Quarts (water) 0.3487 quarts 1 US quart ≈ 946.35 g water
Ounces (mass) 11.64 oz 1 oz = 28.3495 g
Pounds (mass) 0.7275 lb 1 lb = 453.592 g
Kilograms 0.33 kg 1 kg = 1,000 g
Milligrams 330000 mg 1 g = 1,000 mg
Metric Cups 1.32 cups Metric cup = 250 mL
UK Imperial Cups 1.1614 cups UK cup = 284.131 mL

330 Grams in Common Recipes

Here’s what 330 grams works out to in volume for the ingredients you’ll use most in real cooking and baking:

🍞 Bread Baking (Bread Flour)

330 g = 2.5385 cups
Bread flour is denser than all-purpose flour because it has more protein. Use a kitchen scale for the most accurate hydration ratios.

🎂 Cake Baking (Cake Flour)

330 g = 2.8947 cups
Cake flour is lighter and finer than AP flour, so the same weight fills a larger cup volume. Sift before measuring for best results.

🍪 Cookies (Brown Sugar, packed)

330 g = 1.5 cups
Brown sugar is measured packed — pressed firmly into the cup. Loose-packed brown sugar will read about 15% lighter.

🥞 Pancakes & Muffins (Milk)

330 g = 1.375 cups
Milk is slightly denser than water (about 1.03 g/mL). For most recipes you can substitute milk and water 1:1 by weight without recalculating.

🍯 Sweetening with Honey

330 g = 0.9706 cups
Honey is much denser than sugar — the same gram weight occupies far less volume. Substituting honey for sugar 1:1 by weight changes texture.

🧈 Butter (softened or melted)

330 g = 1.4537 cups
In the US, one cup of butter = 2 sticks = 227 g. Convenient reference: 113 g ≈ 1 stick ≈ ½ cup.

🌾 Oatmeal (Rolled Oats)

330 g = 3.6667 cups
Rolled oats are airy, so a cup weighs only about 90 g. Steel-cut oats are denser and won’t follow this conversion.

🍚 Rice (uncooked)

330 g = 1.65 cups
Uncooked long-grain white rice is about 200 g/cup. Rice triples in volume when cooked, so plan portions accordingly.

☕ Espresso/Drip Coffee (Ground)

330 g = 4.125 cups
A standard drip coffee uses ~10 g per cup of brewed coffee. For pour-over, a 1:16 ratio is a great starting point.

Measuring 330 Grams Without a Kitchen Scale

Missing a scale handy? You can still measure out 330 grams using common kitchen tools — just remember the result will be a volume estimate, and accuracy depends heavily on the ingredient.

Use Measuring Cups for Liquids

For water, milk, and other liquids with density close to 1 g/mL, you can measure directly. 330 grams of water ≈ 1.3948 US cups330 mL. Most glass liquid-measuring cups have mL markings that make this easy.

Use Tablespoons and Teaspoons for Small Amounts

For dry powders like flour, sugar, or salt, tablespoons can replace a scale if you’re careful to level off each spoonful with a flat edge. As a baseline (for water): 330 grams ≈ 22.317 tablespoons66.95 teaspoons.

Volume-First Reference (Ingredient-Specific)

  • Flour: Spoon flour into the cup, then level — don’t scoop with the cup (that compresses and adds ~25% weight). 330 g of AP flour ≈ 2.64 cups.
  • Granulated sugar: Sugar packs predictably, so cup measurements stay close to accurate. 330 g ≈ 1.65 cups.
  • Brown sugar: Pack firmly into the cup. 330 g packed ≈ 1.5 cups.
  • Butter: Use the wrapper markings (in the US, 1 stick = 113 g = ½ cup). 330 g ≈ 1.4537 cups.
Pro Tip: Even a basic $15 digital kitchen scale eliminates guesswork. For bread, pastry, and chocolate work — where small differences matter — weighing is non-negotiable. Volume measures vary up to 20% depending on how aerated, packed, or settled the ingredient is.

Grams & Cups: A Cook’s Primer

The Gram — A Universal Weight

A gram (g) is the metric system’s base unit of mass, equal to one-thousandth of a kilogram. Unlike a cup, a gram is identical anywhere in the world and doesn’t change based on how an ingredient is scooped, packed, or sifted. When a recipe specifies 330 grams, it’s telling you exactly how much mass to add — no ambiguity. That’s why professional bakers and serious home cooks favor weighing over volume measuring.

The Cup — A Familiar Volume

A cup is a unit of volume used in cooking, especially in the United States. It measures how much space an ingredient occupies, not how much it weighs. Cups come in a few different sizes depending on which standard you’re working from, so converting 330 grams to cups depends on which “cup” your recipe is referring to.

US Customary Cup

236.588 mL. Used in nearly all American recipes and on US nutrition labels.

US Legal Cup

240 mL. Defined by FDA for nutrition labeling. Slightly larger than the customary cup.

Metric Cup

Exactly 250 mL. Standard in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and many European countries.

UK Imperial Cup

284.131 mL (½ imperial pint). Mostly historical now — modern UK recipes typically use weight or mL.

Why Density Drives the Conversion

Density is mass per unit of volume. To turn 330 grams (a mass) into cups (a volume), you have to apply the ingredient’s density. Water is the baseline at 1 g/mL, which puts 330 grams of water at exactly 1.3948 US cups. Honey is roughly 1.4× denser, so 330 grams of honey fits in only 0.9706 cups. Flour is much less dense in cup form (lots of air between particles), so 330 grams of flour spreads to 2.64 cups — about double the water volume.

FAQ: 330 Grams to Cups

❓ How many cups is 330 grams?

The answer depends on the ingredient’s density. For 330 grams:
  • Water: 1.3948 cups
  • All-purpose flour: 2.64 cups
  • Granulated sugar: 1.65 cups
  • Butter: 1.4537 cups
  • Honey: 0.9706 cups
  • Table salt: 1.2088 cups

⚖️ Why does 330 grams of different ingredients fill different cup volumes?

Because grams measure weight while cups measure volume. The same weight of a dense ingredient like honey takes up less space than the same weight of a light, airy ingredient like flour. The cup itself doesn’t change — only what fills it changes. Honey is roughly 3.4× denser than flour in a measuring cup, which is why 330 g of honey (0.9706 cups) takes much less volume than 330 g of flour (2.64 cups).

📏 What’s the formula to convert 330 grams to cups?

Use simple division:
Cups = Grams ÷ (grams per cup)
For 330 grams of water (236.59 g/cup):
330 ÷ 236.59 = 1.3948 cups.
Swap in the right density value for whichever ingredient you’re working with — see the cheat sheet above.

🥛 Is the answer the same for a metric cup vs. a US cup?

Close, but not identical. A US customary cup holds 236.588 mL; a metric cup (used in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and parts of Europe) is exactly 250 mL — a 5.7% difference. The US legal cup used on nutrition labels is 240 mL. The traditional UK imperial cup (284.131 mL) is noticeably larger and is rarely used in modern recipes. So 330 grams of water = 1.3948 US cups but only 1.32 metric cups.

🎯 Is volume measurement accurate enough for 330 grams of an ingredient?

For everyday cooking, yes. For baking — especially anything with flour, leavening agents, or precise hydration ratios — a digital scale is more reliable. Volume measures vary by 15-25% depending on how packed, sifted, or settled an ingredient is. Weight does not.
Tip: If you must use volume for flour, spoon the flour into the cup and level it off with a knife. Scooping the cup directly into the flour bag can pack in 25-50% more flour than the recipe expects.

📊 Quick reference: 330 grams → cups (common ingredients)

Ingredient g per cup 330 g = cups
Water236.591.3948
All-purpose flour1252.64
Granulated sugar2001.65
Butter2271.4537
Vegetable oil2181.5138
Honey3400.9706
Table salt2731.2088
Baking powder1921.7188
Cocoa powder1003.3
Rolled oats903.6667
Values are averages; actual results vary by brand, temperature, humidity, and packing method.

Nearby Grams to Cups Conversions

Check out the conversions immediately before and after 330 grams on the same scale:

Explore the full Grams to Cups conversion hub for every gram value from 1 to 1000, plus ingredient-specific charts and printable references. Looking for the reverse direction? Visit our Cups to Grams converter. You may also find these related tools useful: Grams to Tablespoons, and Grams to Teaspoons.