mmol/L ↔ mg/dL Converter
Enter values
Results
Action
Use this mmol/L to mg/dL Calculator to convert between molar concentration and mass concentration for common lab analytes. It works for glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides, bilirubin, creatinine, calcium, BUN, and more, and it also supports a custom molar-mass mode for analytes not listed in the preset menu.
Important Note: This calculator converts units only. It does not tell you whether a lab value is normal, abnormal, urgent, or clinically important. Always compare converted lab results with the reference range from the laboratory that performed the test and ask a qualified healthcare professional for medical interpretation.
Reviewed by: AjaxCalculators Editorial Team
Last updated: May 3, 2026
Method source: Standard chemistry unit conversion based on analyte molar mass, with mmol/L ↔ mg/dL and related unit support
Editorial standards: AjaxCalculators Editorial Policy
What This mmol/L to mg/dL Calculator Calculates
This calculator converts between molar concentration and mass concentration. Depending on the selected analyte and input unit, it can convert:
- mmol/L to mg/dL
- mg/dL to mmol/L
- mg/L and mg/dL where supported
- mmol/L and mmol/dL where supported
- preset analyte conversion factors
- custom molar-mass conversions
It is useful for interpreting lab values, converting between SI and conventional units, checking analyte-specific conversion factors, and learning why the correct molecule matters in clinical chemistry conversion.
Why mmol/L and mg/dL Are Different
mmol/L is a molar concentration. It measures the number of millimoles of a substance per liter of solution.
mg/dL is a mass concentration. It measures milligrams of a substance per deciliter of solution.
Because one unit measures amount of substance and the other measures mass, the conversion depends on the substance’s molar mass. This is why glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides, calcium, creatinine, and bilirubin all have different conversion factors.
Core mmol/L to mg/dL Formula
The general chemistry relationship is:
mg/dL = mmol/L × molar mass ÷ 10
Where:
- mg/dL = mass concentration in milligrams per deciliter
- mmol/L = molar concentration in millimoles per liter
- molar mass = grams per mole, which is numerically equal to milligrams per millimole
The reverse formula is:
mmol/L = mg/dL × 10 ÷ molar mass
Why the Formula Uses “÷ 10”
The division by 10 comes from converting liters to deciliters.
- 1 mmol/L × molar mass gives mg/L
- 1 L = 10 dL
- So mg/L ÷ 10 = mg/dL
That gives the shortcut:
mg/dL per mmol/L = molar mass ÷ 10
Formula Summary
| Conversion | Formula | Use |
|---|---|---|
| mmol/L to mg/L | mg/L = mmol/L × molar mass | Convert molar concentration to mass per liter |
| mmol/L to mg/dL | mg/dL = mmol/L × molar mass ÷ 10 | Convert SI-style molar concentration to conventional mass concentration |
| mg/dL to mmol/L | mmol/L = mg/dL × 10 ÷ molar mass | Convert conventional mass concentration to molar concentration |
| mg/dL to mg/L | mg/L = mg/dL × 10 | Convert deciliter-based mass unit to liter-based mass unit |
| mg/L to mg/dL | mg/dL = mg/L ÷ 10 | Convert liter-based mass unit to deciliter-based mass unit |
Common Conversion Factors
The examples below show why the analyte matters. The same 1 mmol/L value does not convert to the same mg/dL value for every substance.
| Analyte | Common Conversion | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Glucose | 1 mmol/L ≈ 18.02 mg/dL | Often rounded to 18 for quick glucose conversion |
| Total, HDL, or LDL cholesterol | 1 mmol/L ≈ 38.67 mg/dL | Common lipid conversion factor |
| Triglycerides | 1 mmol/L ≈ 88.57 mg/dL | Uses a triglyceride-specific factor, not the cholesterol factor |
| Calcium | 1 mmol/L ≈ 4.01 mg/dL | Often rounded to 4.0 for calcium conversion |
| Creatinine | 1 mg/dL ≈ 88.4 µmol/L | Often reported as mg/dL or µmol/L rather than mmol/L |
| Bilirubin | 1 mg/dL ≈ 17.1 µmol/L | Usually discussed in µmol/L ↔ mg/dL, not mmol/L ↔ mg/dL |
| BUN / urea | urea mmol/L × 2.8 = BUN mg/dL | BUN refers to nitrogen mass, not the full urea molecule |
Important: Do not use the cholesterol factor for triglycerides, the glucose factor for cholesterol, or the urea molecular weight for BUN unless the lab result label specifically matches that substance.
Preset Analytes vs Custom Molar Mass
The calculator can use preset analyte factors or a custom molar mass.
| Mode | What It Uses | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Preset analyte | A stored conversion factor for a common lab analyte | Glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides, creatinine, calcium, bilirubin, and similar common values |
| Custom molar mass | The molar mass entered by the user | Chemistry problems, uncommon analytes, research examples, or educational conversions |
Use preset mode when the analyte is listed. Use custom mode only when you know the correct molar mass and the lab result label matches the substance being converted.
Worked Example A: Glucose mmol/L to mg/dL
Suppose a glucose result is 5.5 mmol/L.
Step 1: Use the glucose conversion factor
1 mmol/L glucose ≈ 18.02 mg/dL
Step 2: Multiply
5.5 × 18.02 ≈ 99.1 mg/dL
Result: 5.5 mmol/L glucose ≈ 99 mg/dL.
Worked Example B: Glucose mg/dL to mmol/L
Suppose a glucose result is 126 mg/dL.
Step 1: Use the reverse glucose conversion
mmol/L = mg/dL ÷ 18.02
Step 2: Divide
126 ÷ 18.02 ≈ 6.99 mmol/L
Result: 126 mg/dL glucose ≈ 7.0 mmol/L.
Worked Example C: Cholesterol mmol/L to mg/dL
Suppose a total cholesterol result is 5.2 mmol/L.
Step 1: Use the cholesterol factor
1 mmol/L cholesterol ≈ 38.67 mg/dL
Step 2: Multiply
5.2 × 38.67 ≈ 201.1 mg/dL
Result: 5.2 mmol/L cholesterol ≈ 201 mg/dL.
Worked Example D: Triglycerides mmol/L to mg/dL
Suppose a triglyceride result is 1.7 mmol/L.
Step 1: Use the triglyceride factor
1 mmol/L triglycerides ≈ 88.57 mg/dL
Step 2: Multiply
1.7 × 88.57 ≈ 150.6 mg/dL
Result: 1.7 mmol/L triglycerides ≈ 151 mg/dL.
This example shows why cholesterol and triglycerides should not be converted with the same factor.
Worked Example E: BUN and Urea
BUN is a special case because it refers to blood urea nitrogen, not the full urea molecule.
Suppose a lab gives 7.0 mmol/L urea.
Step 1: Use the BUN relationship
urea mmol/L × 2.8 = BUN mg/dL
Step 2: Multiply
7.0 × 2.8 = 19.6 mg/dL BUN
Result: 7.0 mmol/L urea ≈ 19.6 mg/dL BUN.
This is not the same as converting the full urea molecule mass to mg/dL. The BUN label refers specifically to nitrogen mass.
Worked Example F: Custom Molar Mass
Suppose an educational chemistry example uses a substance with a molar mass of 120 g/mol, and the concentration is 2.5 mmol/L.
Step 1: Apply the general formula
mg/dL = mmol/L × molar mass ÷ 10
Step 2: Substitute the values
mg/dL = 2.5 × 120 ÷ 10
Step 3: Calculate
mg/dL = 30
Result: 2.5 mmol/L ≈ 30 mg/dL for a substance with molar mass 120 g/mol.
Important Note About Bilirubin Units
Bilirubin is commonly reported in mg/dL or µmol/L, not usually in mmol/L for everyday clinical reporting.
A common relationship is:
1 mg/dL bilirubin ≈ 17.1 µmol/L
Therefore:
1 µmol/L bilirubin ≈ 0.0585 mg/dL
Because 1 mmol/L = 1000 µmol/L, users should be careful not to confuse mmol/L and µmol/L. A misplaced “milli” versus “micro” prefix can create a 1000-fold unit error.
Important Note About Electrolytes and mEq/L
Some analytes, especially electrolytes such as sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate, are commonly interpreted clinically in mmol/L or mEq/L rather than mg/dL.
For monovalent ions, mmol/L and mEq/L may be numerically the same, but this is not a universal rule for all ions. For ions with different charges, equivalent-based units require charge information, not just molar mass.
This calculator is best used as a molar-mass conversion tool, not as a replacement for clinical electrolyte interpretation.
Clinical Lab Result Caution
Different lab tests use different units, analytes, reference ranges, methods, and reporting conventions. A correct unit conversion does not automatically mean the result has the same clinical meaning across all labs or countries.
Be especially careful with analytes that have special reporting conventions. BUN reports nitrogen in urea rather than the full urea molecule, bilirubin is often reported in µmol/L rather than mmol/L, and electrolytes may be interpreted in mmol/L or mEq/L rather than mg/dL.
How to Use This mmol/L to mg/dL Calculator
- Select a preset molecule or choose Custom.
- If using custom mode, enter the correct molar mass.
- Enter the value you want to convert.
- Choose the input unit, such as mmol/L, mg/dL, mg/L, or another supported unit.
- Choose the output direction if the calculator provides that option.
- Review the converted value, conversion factor, and analyte used. The result updates when you enter or change a value.
- Compare clinical lab values only with the reference range from the laboratory that performed the test.
How to Interpret the Result
The converted result tells you the same analyte concentration expressed in a different unit system. It does not tell you whether the result is normal, abnormal, urgent, or clinically important.
| Result Situation | Possible Meaning | What to Check |
|---|---|---|
| Converted value seems very different | The analyte may use a large conversion factor | Confirm the correct analyte was selected |
| Lipid value differs from another calculator | Different rounding or factor precision may be used | Check whether cholesterol or triglyceride factor was selected |
| BUN conversion seems unusual | BUN uses nitrogen mass, not full urea mass | Confirm whether the lab reports urea or BUN |
| Bilirubin value appears off by 1000 | µmol/L may have been confused with mmol/L | Check the prefix carefully |
| Electrolyte value is being converted to mg/dL | mg/dL may not be the usual clinical unit | Use the lab’s reported unit and reference range |
When This Calculator Is Useful
This calculator is useful when you need an analyte-specific unit conversion, especially when comparing results across unit systems.
- Convert glucose results between SI and conventional units
- Convert cholesterol and triglyceride values for lipid reporting
- Check bilirubin, creatinine, calcium, and BUN conversions
- Use custom molar mass for chemistry or lab-study work
- Cross-check analyte-specific unit factors quickly
- Understand why different analytes have different conversion factors
- Translate educational examples between molar and mass concentration
When You Need More Than This Calculator
This calculator converts units only. It does not interpret medical meaning.
Use the laboratory report, clinician guidance, or official clinical reference information when:
- you are deciding whether a lab result is normal or abnormal
- you are tracking diabetes, kidney disease, liver disease, lipid disorders, or other medical conditions
- you are comparing results from different laboratories
- you are converting pediatric, pregnancy, or critical-care values
- the specimen type matters, such as serum, plasma, urine, or whole blood
- the test method or calibration may affect interpretation
- you have symptoms or urgent medical concerns
- you are considering medication, supplement, or diet changes based on a lab value
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Using one universal factor: mmol/L to mg/dL conversion depends on the analyte’s molar mass.
- Using the cholesterol factor for triglycerides: cholesterol uses about 38.67, while triglycerides use about 88.57.
- Confusing bilirubin µmol/L with mmol/L: this can create a 1000-fold unit error.
- Confusing urea with BUN: BUN reports nitrogen mass, not the full urea molecule.
- Ignoring lab reference ranges: a unit conversion does not determine whether a result is clinically normal.
- Entering the wrong molar mass: custom mode is only accurate when the molar mass is correct.
- Mixing specimen types: serum, plasma, urine, and whole-blood results may have different interpretation contexts.
- Changing treatment based on conversion alone: lab values should be interpreted by a qualified healthcare professional.
Assumptions and Important Notes
- This calculator is only accurate when the correct analyte or correct molar mass is selected.
- The same numeric mmol/L value can convert to very different mg/dL values depending on the substance.
- BUN is a special case because it refers to the nitrogen portion of urea rather than the full urea molecule mass.
- Bilirubin is commonly reported as µmol/L or mg/dL, so check the prefix before converting.
- Some analytes, especially electrolytes such as sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate, are usually discussed clinically in mmol/L or mEq/L rather than mg/dL.
- Different laboratories may use different reference ranges, methods, specimen types, and reporting conventions.
- This is a unit-conversion tool, not a diagnostic tool.
- Always interpret lab results against the reference range from the lab that performed the test.
Practical Uses of a mmol/L to mg/dL Calculator
- Convert glucose from mmol/L to mg/dL
- Convert glucose from mg/dL to mmol/L
- Convert cholesterol from mmol/L to mg/dL
- Convert triglycerides from mmol/L to mg/dL
- Convert calcium using molar-mass-based factors
- Convert bilirubin while checking µmol/L vs mmol/L carefully
- Compare BUN and urea unit relationships
- Use custom molar mass for chemistry calculations
References
- NCBI Bookshelf: Lipid conversion factors for cholesterol and triglycerides
- Auckland District Health Board Test Guide: BUN and urea conversion factors
- MSD Veterinary Manual: Clinical chemistry SI conversion factors
- Merck Manual Professional: Blood tests and normal laboratory value context
- MedlinePlus: How to understand your lab results
- NIST: SI units overview
Related Calculators
- Cholesterol Units Converter
- mcg to IU Converter
- INR Calculator
- Calorie Calculator
- Maintenance Calorie Calculator
- BMI Calculator
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this mmol/L to mg/dL Calculator do?
It converts between molar concentration and mass concentration for selected analytes using analyte-specific molar mass or preset conversion factors.
What is the formula for mmol/L to mg/dL?
The general formula is mg/dL = mmol/L × molar mass ÷ 10.
What is the formula for mg/dL to mmol/L?
The reverse formula is mmol/L = mg/dL × 10 ÷ molar mass.
Why do I need to select an analyte?
You need to select an analyte because each substance has a different molar mass, which changes the conversion factor.
Is there one universal conversion factor from mmol/L to mg/dL?
No. The conversion factor depends on the molecule or analyte being converted.
What is the glucose conversion factor?
Glucose is commonly converted using about 1 mmol/L = 18.02 mg/dL, often rounded to 18 for quick estimates.
What is the cholesterol conversion factor?
Total, HDL, and LDL cholesterol are commonly converted using about 1 mmol/L = 38.67 mg/dL.
What is the triglyceride conversion factor?
Triglycerides are commonly converted using about 1 mmol/L = 88.57 mg/dL.
Can I use the cholesterol factor for triglycerides?
No. Cholesterol and triglycerides use different conversion factors.
Why is BUN a special case?
BUN stands for blood urea nitrogen. It reports the mass of nitrogen in urea, not the mass of the full urea molecule.
How do I convert urea mmol/L to BUN mg/dL?
A common relationship is urea mmol/L × 2.8 = BUN mg/dL.
Is bilirubin converted from mmol/L or µmol/L?
Bilirubin is commonly reported in µmol/L or mg/dL. Check the prefix carefully because mmol/L and µmol/L differ by a factor of 1000.
What is a common bilirubin conversion?
A common relationship is 1 mg/dL bilirubin ≈ 17.1 µmol/L.
Can this calculator tell me whether my lab result is normal?
No. It only converts units. Normal or abnormal interpretation depends on the lab reference range, specimen type, test method, and medical context.
Why do lab reference ranges differ?
Reference ranges can differ because of lab methods, instruments, calibration, specimen type, population, age, sex, and clinical context.
Can I use custom molar mass mode for any substance?
You can use custom mode for educational chemistry conversions when you know the correct molar mass and the unit label matches the substance being converted.
Are mmol/L and mEq/L the same?
They can be numerically the same for some monovalent ions, but not for all ions. Equivalent-based units depend on electrical charge, not only molar mass.
Can this calculator replace medical advice?
No. It is a unit-conversion tool only. Lab results should be interpreted with the reference range and guidance from a qualified healthcare professional.
Disclaimer: This mmol/L to mg/dL Calculator provides educational chemistry and lab-unit conversions between molar concentration and mass concentration. Results depend on the selected analyte, molar mass, conversion direction, unit choice, rounding, and whether the analyte label matches the lab result being converted. The same mmol/L value can convert to very different mg/dL values for different substances because each molecule has a different molar mass.
This calculator does not interpret laboratory results, diagnose medical conditions, recommend treatment, or replace professional medical advice. Always compare converted values with the official reference range from the laboratory that performed the test and consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical interpretation.