Pints to Cups: A Cook's Guide to Getting the Conversion Right

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters

Most measurement confusion starts with a single assumption: that a pint is a pint. It isn't. The US liquid pint holds 16 fluid ounces and the UK imperial pint holds 20, a difference that traces back to how each country standardised the gallon. Since a standard cup is 8 fluid ounces, that 4-ounce gap is exactly what separates the tidy "1 pint = 2 cups" rule from the messier "1 pint = 2.4 cups" you get with British recipes. Knowing which system your recipe came from is the first and most important step.

For everyday US cooking the rule is clean. One pint is two cups, two pints make four cups, and four pints fill a US quart-and-a-half... or, more usefully, two pints is a quart and four cups. Half a pint is a single cup. Because these relationships are fixed by definition, there is no rounding involved: a US pint of stock, cream, or water is always precisely two measuring cups, which is why the conversion is safe even in baking where small errors compound.

British and Commonwealth recipes are where people get caught out. If a recipe printed in the UK calls for a pint of milk and you measure two US cups, you will be short by about 95 millilitres, close to half a cup. For a sauce that might not matter, but for a sponge, a custard, or a yeast dough the hydration ratio shifts enough to change the result. When a source uses imperial pints, multiply by 2.4 rather than 2, or better, measure by weight if the recipe gives grams.

Then there is the dry pint, the one stamped on berry and cherry-tomato containers in US supermarkets. A dry pint is a measure of volume for solids, not liquids, and it is bigger than a liquid pint at about 18.6 fluid ounces, or roughly 2.33 cups. This is why a "pint" of blueberries doesn't line up with the liquid conversions; if a recipe asks for two cups of berries, one dry pint gives you a little extra, which is usually fine.

The practical takeaway is to settle two questions before you convert: which pint and which cup. Identify whether your recipe is American or British, and whether the pint is liquid or dry. Once those are pinned down, the arithmetic is trivial and a converter just removes the chance of a slip. Match the systems, apply the right multiplier, and the cups you measure will be the cups the recipe intended.

Quick tips

  • Default to 2 cups per pint only for US liquid recipes; switch to 2.4 cups per pint the moment you spot a British or Commonwealth source.
  • For berries, cherry tomatoes, and other produce sold by the dry pint, use about 2.33 cups rather than 2.
  • When halving or doubling, convert to cups first, then scale, to avoid stacking rounding errors across fractional pints.
  • If a recipe also lists millilitres, use those as a tie-breaker: a US pint is 473 ml and an imperial pint is 568 ml, so the metric figure tells you which pint was meant.

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