HowMany.wiki
Contact Us!
Please get in touch with us if you:
- Have any suggestions
- Have any questions
- Have found an error/bug
- Anything else ...
To contact us, please click HERE.
1/2 Tbsp of Vanilla Extract in Grams
How many grams of vanilla extract in 1/2 tbsp?
1/2 tbsp of vanilla extract equals 6.51 grams*
About vanilla extract measurements
Vanilla extract is alcohol-based, which pulls its density below water to about 0.88 g/ml — a tablespoon is near 13 g. The alcohol level set by the bottler nudges the figure: higher-proof extracts run a touch lighter, while imitation vanilla in a syrup base can measure heavier.
Tbsp of vanilla extract equivalent in grams?

FAQs on vanilla extract volume to weight conversion
Is 1/2 tbsp of vanilla extract 6.51 grams?
Yes — 1/2 tbsp of vanilla extract weighs 6.51 grams, based on a density of 0.88 g/ml.
1/2 tbsp of vanilla extract equals how many grams?
1/2 tbsp of vanilla extract is equivalent 6.51 grams.
How much is 6.51 grams of vanilla extract in tbsp?
6.51 grams of vanilla extract equals 1/2 ( ~ 1/2) tbsp.
US tablespoons to Grams of Vanilla extract Conversion Chart
Note: Fractions are rounded to common recipe fractions (1/8, 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 2/3, 3/4…). Values are rounded to 3 significant figures.
| US tablespoons to grams of Vanilla extract | |
|---|---|
| 0.813 grams | |
| 1.63 grams | |
| 3.25 grams | |
| 4.34 grams | |
| 6.51 grams | |
| 8.67 grams | |
| 9.76 grams | |
| 1 US tablespoon | 13 grams |
| 1 | 13.8 grams |
| 1 | 14.6 grams |
| 1 | 16.3 grams |
| 1 | 17.3 grams |
| 1 | 19.5 grams |
| 1 | 21.7 grams |
| 1 | 22.8 grams |
| 2 US tablespoons | 26 grams |
| 2 | 26.8 grams |
| 2 | 27.7 grams |
| 2 | 29.3 grams |
| 2 | 30.4 grams |
| 2 | 32.5 grams |
| 3 US tablespoons | 39 grams |
| 4 US tablespoons | 52 grams |
| 5 US tablespoons | 65.1 grams |
| 6 US tablespoons | 78.1 grams |
| 8 US tablespoons | 104 grams |
| 10 US tablespoons | 130 grams |
References:
Popular Volume to Weight Conversions
A note on cooking ingredients measurements
Notes: results are rounded (by default) to 3 significant figures. Cooking conversions use standard ingredient densities — the exact weight varies slightly with the brand and how tightly the ingredient is packed ☺.