Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons (cwt to t) Converter
1 Hundredweight (UK) equals 0.0508 Metric Tons (1 cwt = 0.0508 t). Convert Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons with formula, table, and examples.
One long hundredweight equals approximately 0.05080 metric tons (tonnes). The long hundredweight at 112 pounds is the British Imperial bulk unit, while the metric ton at exactly 1,000 kilograms is the international standard for industrial-scale weights. It takes roughly 19.68 long hundredweights to make one metric ton.
How to Convert Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons
- Take your value in Hundredweights (UK)
- Multiply by 0.0508023454
- Read the result in Metric Tons
Common Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons Conversions
| Hundredweights (UK) (cwt) | Metric Tons (t) | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 0.1 cwt | 0.00508 t | |
| 0.25 cwt | 0.012701 t | |
| 0.5 cwt | 0.025401 t | |
| 1 cwt | 0.050802 t | |
| 2 cwt | 0.101605 t | |
| 5 cwt | 0.254012 t | |
| 10 cwt | 0.508023 t | |
| 20 cwt | 1.016047 t | |
| 50 cwt | 2.540117 t | |
| 100 cwt | 5.080235 t | |
| 200 cwt | 10.160469 t | |
| 500 cwt | 25.401173 t |
Good to Know About Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons Conversion
The tension between hundredweights and metric tons came to a head when Britain joined the European Economic Community in 1973. British farmers accustomed to pricing per hundredweight had to learn metric-ton pricing almost overnight. The Common Agricultural Policy quoted everything in metric tons, and British agriculture had to adapt or be left behind in European markets. The transition was painful but ultimately successful - though some British farming publications continued printing hundredweight equivalents in parentheses for another generation.
Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons: What You Need to Know
This conversion is essential for international commodity trading. When British farmers sell grain priced per hundredweight to European buyers who price per metric ton, this conversion determines the deal's economics. Logistics companies moving goods between Imperial and metric markets use it daily. The close but not exact relationship between 20 hundredweights per long ton and 1 metric ton causes frequent confusion in cross-border trade.
What is a Hundredweight (UK)? cwt
A UK hundredweight (long hundredweight) is exactly 112 pounds or 50.80234544 kilograms. Used in British agriculture and traditional commerce.
Learn more about Hundredweight (UK) →What is a Metric Ton? t
A metric unit of mass equal to 1000 kilograms. Used for measuring heavy loads, cargo, and industrial quantities.
Learn more about Metric Ton →Going the other way? Use our Metric Tons to Hundredweights (UK) converter.
Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons FAQ
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Approximately 19.684 long hundredweights. One metric ton is 1,000 kilograms, and one long hundredweight is about 50.802 kilograms, so 1,000 divided by 50.802 gives 19.684. This is frustratingly close to but not exactly 20.
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Because 20 long hundredweights equal one long ton (1,016 kg), which is 1.6 percent more than one metric ton (1,000 kg). The near-miss is a coincidence of history - the hundredweight was defined centuries before the metric ton existed, and neither was designed with the other in mind.
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The long ton at approximately 1,016 kg is about 1.6 percent heavier than the metric ton at exactly 1,000 kg. The difference of 16 kg is small in percentage terms but significant in commodity trading, where it represents real monetary value across large shipments.
Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Hundredweights (UK) to Metric Tons
Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.
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Numerous disputes, if not outright disasters. A contract specifying '100 tons' without clarifying which ton means either 100 metric tons (1,968.4 cwt) or 100 long tons (2,000 cwt) - a difference of 31.6 hundredweights or about 1,600 kilograms. At commodity prices, that gap can be worth thousands of dollars. International trade lawyers have built entire careers on this ambiguity.
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It is certainly not memorable. Unlike clean ratios like 20 hundredweights per long ton, the metric-ton conversion produces a number that nobody can hold in their head. This is precisely why metrication advocates argue for abandoning the hundredweight entirely - its metric equivalent is simply not practical for mental arithmetic.
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Possibly. If the metric system had been designed around the hundredweight rather than the kilogram, a 'metric ton' might have been defined as exactly 20 hundredweights (50.8 kg each = 1,016 kg). But the French revolutionaries who created the metric system had no interest in English commercial weights, and the kilogram was derived from the mass of water, not from any existing trade unit.
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Need the reverse? Use our Metric Tons to Hundredweights (UK) converter. See all Weight & Mass converters.