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Micrograms to Grains (μg to gr) Converter

1 μg = 0.00002 gr

1 Microgram equals 0.00002 Grains (1 μg = 0.00002 gr). Convert Micrograms to Grains with formula, table, and examples.

One microgram equals approximately 0.00001543 grains, or about 1.543 times 10-5 grains. The microgram at one millionth of a gram is the modern unit of pharmaceutical precision, while the grain at 64.8 milligrams is the ancient root of all English weight systems. It takes about 64,799 micrograms to make one grain.

How to Convert Micrograms to Grains

gr = μg × 0.0000154324
Multiply the value in Micrograms by 0.0000154324
  1. Take your value in Micrograms
  2. Multiply by 0.0000154324
  3. Read the result in Grains

Common Micrograms to Grains Conversions

Micrograms (μg) Grains (gr) Status
1,000 μg 0.0154323584 gr
5,000 μg 0.0771617918 gr
10,000 μg 0.1543235835 gr
50,000 μg 0.7716179176 gr
100,000 μg 1.5432358353 gr
500,000 μg 7.7161791765 gr
1,000,000 μg 15.4323583529 gr
5,000,000 μg 77.1617917647 gr
10,000,000 μg 154.3235835294 gr
50,000,000 μg 771.6179176471 gr

Good to Know About Micrograms to Grains Conversion

The grain was pharmacy's fundamental unit for over two thousand years, from Roman physicians through Victorian apothecaries. The microgram replaced it in the 20th century as drugs became more potent and dosing precision became critical. This transition was not merely technical but cultural - it marked the transformation of pharmacy from an artisanal craft (weighing grains on hand balances) to a precision science (measuring micrograms with analytical instruments). The 64,799-fold ratio between grain and microgram measures the distance between these two worlds of pharmaceutical practice.

Micrograms to Grains: What You Need to Know

This conversion bridges modern and historical pharmaceutical measurement. Some medications, particularly aspirin, were historically dosed in grains (one adult aspirin was 5 grains or about 325 mg). Modern potent drugs are dosed in micrograms. Understanding the relationship between these units helps interpret historical pharmacopoeia and compare dosing conventions across eras.

What is a Microgram? μg

A microgram is one millionth of a gram and one billionth of a kilogram. It is commonly used in medicine for precise drug dosages and in nutrition for vitamin measurements.

Metric medication dosing vitamin supplements environmental testing
Learn more about Microgram →

What is a Grain? gr

A grain is a unit of mass equal to exactly 64.79891 milligrams. It is the same in the avoirdupois, troy, and apothecaries' systems, derived from the 1959 international agreement defining the pound as exactly 0.45359237 kilograms.

Imperial Troy Apothecaries ammunition weight bullet measurement historical pharmacy
Learn more about Grain →

Going the other way? Use our Grains to Micrograms converter.

Micrograms to Grains FAQ

  • Approximately 64,799 micrograms. One grain equals exactly 0.06479891 grams, and one gram contains 1,000,000 micrograms, so 0.06479891 times 1,000,000 equals approximately 64,799.

  • The microgram is heavily used for potent drug dosing. The grain is nearly extinct but occasionally appears on older aspirin labels (325 mg = 5 grains) and in some compounding pharmacy traditions. The American pharmaceutical industry officially abandoned grains in favor of metric units decades ago, but legacy references persist.

  • Historical prescription records from before the mid-20th century list doses in grains. Translating these to micrograms or milligrams is necessary for comparing historical and modern dosing practices. Medical historians studying the evolution of drug therapy need this conversion to understand what doses patients actually received.

Non-Frequently Asked Questions About Micrograms to Grains

Questions nobody should ask - but someone did.

  • A standardized grain (the weight unit) is about 64,799 micrograms. An actual barley grain varies from about 30,000 to 65,000 micrograms depending on variety and moisture content. The weight unit was originally based on the average barley grain but was standardized to a fixed value that no longer tracks the biological variability of real barley.

  • No. The most precise pharmaceutical balances in 1900 could resolve to about 0.1 grain (6,500 micrograms). Individual micrograms were beyond the detection capability of any instrument until the mid-20th century. A pharmacist in 1900 would have considered microgram-level measurement science fiction - yet patients today routinely receive microgram-precise doses.

  • It represents one of the largest. A pharmacist trained in grains and a pharmacist trained in micrograms are separated not just by units but by an entire philosophy of measurement precision. The grain pharmacist accepted variation of plus or minus a grain (65,000 micrograms). The microgram pharmacist demands precision of plus or minus a few micrograms. The tolerance has tightened by a factor of roughly 10,000.

Need the reverse? Use our Grains to Micrograms converter. See all Weight & Mass converters.