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.
Honey — Grams in Milliliters
1 gram of honey equals 0.7 milliliters*
About honey measurements
Few kitchen staples are as heavy as honey: at about 1.44 g/ml (FAO density database) a single US cup tips the scale near 340 g. Crystallized or creamed honey whips in tiny air pockets and measures lighter by the spoon, so gently warming it back to a clear liquid gives the steadiest weight.

Grams of honey equivalent in milliliters?
FAQs on honey weight to volume conversion
1 gram of honey equals how many milliliters?
1 gram of honey is equivalent 0.7 milliliters.
How much is 0.7 milliliters of honey in grams?
0.7 milliliters of honey equals 1 gram.
Honey Conversion Chart Near 1 Gram
| Grams to Milliliters of Honey | |
|---|---|
| 1 gram | 0.696 milliliters |
| 1.1 grams | 0.765 milliliters |
| 1.2 grams | 0.835 milliliters |
| 1.3 grams | 0.905 milliliters |
| 1.4 grams | 0.974 milliliters |
| 1.5 grams | 1.04 milliliters |
| 1.6 grams | 1.11 milliliters |
| 1.7 grams | 1.18 milliliters |
| 1.8 grams | 1.25 milliliters |
| 1.9 grams | 1.32 milliliters |
| 2 grams | 1.39 milliliters |
| 2.1 grams | 1.46 milliliters |
| 2.2 grams | 1.53 milliliters |
| 2.3 grams | 1.6 milliliters |
| 2.4 grams | 1.67 milliliters |
| 2.5 grams | 1.74 milliliters |
| 2.6 grams | 1.81 milliliters |
| 2.7 grams | 1.88 milliliters |
| 2.8 grams | 1.95 milliliters |
| 2.9 grams | 2.02 milliliters |
| 3 grams | 2.09 milliliters |
| 3.1 grams | 2.16 milliliters |
| 3.2 grams | 2.23 milliliters |
| 3.3 grams | 2.3 milliliters |
| 3.4 grams | 2.37 milliliters |
Note: Values are rounded to 3 significant figures. Fractions are rounded to common recipe fractions (1/8, 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 2/3, 3/4…).
References:
Weight to Volume Conversions - Recipes
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 ☺.