500 grams to cups
500 grams is a big-batch weight that translates to dramatically different cup totals depending on the ingredient.
Half a kilo at 500 grams is large-batch territory, the kind of weight you reach for celebration cakes or multiple loaves. Spread across the cup it tells very different stories per ingredient: many cups of flour, but far fewer of compact butter or syrup.
Instant baking converter
Convert by ingredient, cup size and unit. Works with decimals and fractions like 1 1/2 or ¾.
500 grams to cups by ingredient
| Ingredient | 500 g in cups | Decimal |
|---|---|---|
| All-purpose flour | 4.17 cups | 4.17 |
| Bread flour | 4.17 cups | 4.17 |
| Cake flour | 4.39 cups | 4.39 |
| Almond flour | 5.21 cups | 5.21 |
| Granulated sugar | 2½ cups | 2.5 |
| Packed brown sugar | 2¼ cups | 2.27 |
| Powdered sugar | 4.17 cups | 4.17 |
| Butter | 2.2 cups | 2.2 |
| Cocoa powder | 5⅞ cups | 5.88 |
| Rolled oats | 5.56 cups | 5.56 |
| Honey | 1½ cups | 1.47 |
| Milk | 2 cups | 2.04 |
| Vegetable oil | 2.29 cups | 2.29 |
Five hundred grams is half a kilogram, the metric baker's go-to bulk figure, common for a full flour weight in bread doughs, large cakes, or batch baking. The cup equivalent depends entirely on the ingredient, and at this size the gaps are dramatic. Five hundred grams of all-purpose flour (about 120 g per cup) is about 4.17 cups, while the same 500 g of granulated sugar (about 200 g per cup) is just 2.5 cups, well over a cup and a half less for the identical mass. Light cocoa powder (about 85 g per cup) stretches 500 g to nearly 5.9 cups, and dense butter (about 227 g per cup) shrinks to about 2.2 cups. From two and a half cups to almost six for one weight, this is the clearest proof that grams-to-cups is never one-size-fits-all. At 500 g, a scale is essential.
Cups measure volume and grams measure weight, so there is no single grams-to-cups number, always pick the ingredient. Choose it in the calculator above to switch cup sizes too.