Unit Converter
Product specs mix units constantly. A rice cooker lists cups and liters in the same sentence. A fridge quotes cubic feet but the cabinet is measured in centimeters. A scale lists pounds and kilograms on different lines. This converter handles the four categories that show up in appliance and product shopping: length, weight, volume, and temperature. Enter a value in any unit and the other unit updates live as you type. It also displays a few common comparison points so the number feels grounded, which matters when you are trying to judge whether seven liters of air fryer capacity feels big or small for your household. Bookmark it as a quick check before you commit to a size.
Three tips before you measure
- Write the unit next to every dimension you measure. Half the kitchen fit errors come from mixing inches and centimeters on one note.
- Round product specs down, not up, when fitting into a tight space. Manufacturer tolerances swing by a few millimeters.
- Check the listed unit on both the product page and the box label. They occasionally disagree.
FAQ
Why do product specs mix units?
Because different supply chains standardize on different units. A pan made in Europe lists centimeters while a pan sold in the US lists inches, even when they are the same product.
Which unit matters for buying?
Use the unit of the space you are fitting into. If your cabinet is measured in inches, convert the product spec to inches before deciding.
Do minor rounding errors matter?
For cookware and furniture, a half inch margin is usually fine. For appliances fitting into an alcove, always measure twice and round down.