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mL to Teaspoons Converter — mL to tsp

Convert milliliters to teaspoons and teaspoons to mL instantly. Covers medicine dosing, cooking, and baking conversions. Includes conversion table. Free tool.

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The Conversion: 1 mL = 0.202884 Teaspoons

One milliliter equals 0.202884 US teaspoons. Equivalently, 5 mL ≈ 1 teaspoon. This is the most commonly used conversion in medicine dosing and cooking worldwide.

Quick mental estimate: Divide mL by 5 to get teaspoons. 10 mL = 2 tsp. 15 mL = 3 tsp = 1 tablespoon. 30 mL = 6 tsp = 2 tablespoons = 1 fl oz. This approximation is accurate to within 1.4% — close enough for all cooking and most medical purposes.

Important for medicine: The pharmaceutical industry standardizes 1 teaspoon = 5 mL exactly (not the 4.929 mL US volumetric teaspoon). When a medicine label says "take 5 mL (1 teaspoon)," they mean exactly 5 mL. Always use a calibrated dosing syringe or medicine cup, not a kitchen teaspoon, which can vary from 2.5 to 7.8 mL.

Milliliters to Teaspoons Conversion Table

Common milliliter amounts converted to teaspoons, with practical context:

Milliliters (mL)Teaspoons (tsp)Common context
1 mL0.20 tspSmall dropper dose; 20 drops of water
2.5 mL0.51 tspHalf teaspoon; infant medication dose
5 mL1.01 tsp1 teaspoon; standard child medication dose
7.5 mL1.52 tsp1½ teaspoons; common pediatric dose
10 mL2.03 tsp2 teaspoons; adult cough syrup dose
15 mL3.04 tsp1 tablespoon; standard cooking measure
20 mL4.06 tspLarge adult medication dose
30 mL6.09 tsp1 fluid ounce; 2 tablespoons; shot glass
50 mL10.14 tspSmall medicine cup (full)
100 mL20.29 tspSmall juice box; half a US cup
250 mL50.72 tsp1 metric cup; small glass of water

Medicine Dosing: mL to Teaspoons Safety Guide

Converting milliliters to teaspoons is one of the most important everyday conversions — and getting it wrong with medication can be dangerous. Here's what you need to know about safe liquid medication dosing.

Why mL is replacing teaspoons in medicine: The FDA, American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and World Health Organization (WHO) all recommend using milliliters instead of teaspoons for liquid medication dosing. The reason is simple: kitchen teaspoons are wildly inconsistent in volume. A 2010 study in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that patients using kitchen spoons had a 17% error rate in dosing, while those using mL-marked syringes had less than 3% error.

Critical conversion landmarks: Memorize these: 2.5 mL = ½ tsp, 5 mL = 1 tsp, 10 mL = 2 tsp, 15 mL = 1 tbsp (3 tsp), 30 mL = 1 fl oz (6 tsp). These are the dosing points used by virtually every liquid medication on the market.

A common error happens when switching between a prescription written in mL and a dosing device marked in teaspoons (or vice versa). A doctor prescribes "7.5 mL twice daily" and the parent uses a teaspoon marked as 5 mL, giving only 5 mL per dose — a 33% underdose. Or they interpret "1½ teaspoons" as 1.5 mL instead of 7.5 mL — an 80% underdose. These are not hypothetical scenarios; they account for thousands of medication errors annually in the US.

Cooking Conversions: mL to Kitchen Measurements

When following international recipes that use milliliters, converting to teaspoons and tablespoons helps American cooks without metric measuring tools. Here are the key relationships:

Metric measureUS equivalentPractical note
5 mL1 teaspoonUniversal starting point for conversion
15 mL1 tablespoon (3 tsp)Standard for soy sauce, vinegar, oil
30 mL2 tablespoons (1 fl oz)Small sauce portions
60 mL¼ cup (4 tbsp, 12 tsp)Common recipe increment
80 mL⅓ cupBatter and dough measures
120 mL½ cupMedium liquid measure
180 mL¾ cupCommon for stock, cream
240 mL1 cup (48 tsp)US cup (note: metric cup = 250 mL)

The cup discrepancy: A US cup is 236.588 mL (often rounded to 240 mL), while an Australian/metric cup is exactly 250 mL. A Japanese cup is 200 mL. An imperial cup (rarely used now) is 284 mL. When a recipe just says "1 cup," the country of origin determines the volume. The safest approach is to look for mL amounts in the recipe, and convert those to teaspoons or cups using the table above.

For small quantities of potent ingredients — vanilla extract, almond extract, chili oil, truffle oil, fish sauce — the teaspoon is the most practical unit. These ingredients are sold in small bottles (often 30–60 mL = 6–12 tsp), and even a few extra mL can overpower a dish. Converting the recipe's mL to teaspoons gives you a familiar reference for "how much is too much."

Professional chefs in fine dining increasingly use digital scales and measure everything in grams and mL, even liquids. But for home cooks, the teaspoon remains the go-to tool for small volumes. The mL-to-teaspoon conversion bridges the gap between professionally written recipes (in mL) and home kitchen equipment (teaspoon sets).

Skincare and Beauty: mL Measurements

Skincare products, serums, and beauty oils are almost always labeled in milliliters. Understanding the teaspoon equivalent helps consumers gauge how much product they're getting and how long it will last.

When comparing product value, converting mL to a familiar teaspoon amount helps assess price-per-use. A $40 serum in a 15 mL bottle (3 teaspoons total) at 4 drops per use (0.2 mL per use) provides 75 uses = $0.53 per use. A $60 serum in a 30 mL bottle at the same usage rate provides 150 uses = $0.40 per use — actually cheaper despite the higher price tag. The mL-to-teaspoon conversion makes these calculations intuitive.

For DIY beauty products — face masks, hair treatments, body scrubs — recipes often mix metric measurements (mL for liquids) with volume measurements (teaspoons for powders and small additions). A recipe might call for "30 mL aloe vera gel + 1 teaspoon honey + 5 drops (0.25 mL) tea tree oil." Understanding that 30 mL = 6 teaspoons helps visualize the proportions: the base is 6 teaspoons of gel, plus a small teaspoon of honey, plus a tiny fraction of oil.

Scientific and Laboratory Use

In laboratory settings, the milliliter is the standard unit for liquid measurement. Scientists never use teaspoons — but understanding the conversion helps science communicators explain findings to the public, and helps non-scientists understand scientific papers.

Blood tests and medical samples: A standard blood draw takes 5–10 mL (1–2 teaspoons). Knowing this helps patients understand that "10 mL of blood" is not an alarming amount — it's just two teaspoons. A blood sugar test from a finger prick uses about 0.001 mL (0.0002 tsp) — barely visible.

Chemistry and biology: Reagent volumes in experiments are measured in mL and µL (microliters). 1 mL = 1,000 µL. A PCR reaction (the kind used in COVID tests) uses about 25 µL total = 0.025 mL = 0.005 tsp — one two-hundredth of a teaspoon. The precision required in these applications is why teaspoons are never used in science.

Environmental science: Water quality standards are reported in milligrams per liter (mg/L) or parts per million (ppm). The safe lead level in drinking water (15 µg/L per EPA standards) means that in a teaspoon (5 mL) of safe water, there must be less than 0.075 micrograms of lead — an amount invisible to the naked eye.

Pharmacology: Drug concentrations are expressed as mg/mL. A common acetaminophen suspension is 160 mg/5 mL, meaning each teaspoon delivers 160 mg of the active ingredient. Doubling the dose to 10 mL (2 tsp) gives 320 mg. A standard adult Tylenol tablet is 500 mg — equivalent to 15.6 mL (3.2 tsp) of the children's liquid. These equivalences matter for adults who have difficulty swallowing tablets and use liquid formulations instead.

Bartending and Cocktails: mL Precision

Modern cocktail recipes increasingly use milliliters for precision, while traditional bartending relies on jiggers, teaspoons, dashes, and ounces. Converting between mL and teaspoons is essential for precise cocktail crafting.

A classic cocktail example: a Whiskey Sour requires 60 mL (12 tsp) bourbon, 22.5 mL (4.5 tsp) fresh lemon juice, and 15 mL (3 tsp) simple syrup. Knowing the mL-to-teaspoon conversion helps home bartenders without a jigger set measure accurately using kitchen teaspoons. Three teaspoons = 1 tablespoon = 15 mL provides the backbone for almost all cocktail measurements.

For flavoring additions — bitters, syrups, liqueurs used in small amounts — teaspoons are often more practical than mL, as most home bars don't have graduated cylinders. A recipe calling for "7.5 mL of grenadine" is easier to measure as "1½ teaspoons." Similarly, "2.5 mL of absinthe rinse" translates to "½ teaspoon" — a much more intuitive instruction for the home bartender.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teaspoons is 5 mL?

5 mL = 1.014 US teaspoons, which is essentially 1 teaspoon. The pharmaceutical industry defines 1 teaspoon as exactly 5 mL. This is the most important mL-to-teaspoon conversion to memorize.

How many teaspoons is 10 mL?

10 mL = 2.03 teaspoons, essentially 2 teaspoons. This is a common adult medication dose and equals ⅔ of a tablespoon. It's also the standard dose for many children's cough syrups for ages 12+.

How many teaspoons is 15 mL?

15 mL = 3.04 teaspoons = 1 tablespoon. This is one of the most useful cooking conversions: 1 tablespoon = 3 teaspoons = 15 mL. It's also the standard size of most kitchen tablespoon measures.

How many mL is half a teaspoon?

Half a teaspoon = 2.46 mL, rounded to 2.5 mL in medicine and cooking. This is a common pediatric medication dose and a standard baking measurement for leavening agents like baking soda.

Why do doctors prefer mL over teaspoons?

Kitchen teaspoons vary wildly in volume (2.5–7.8 mL). A calibrated mL syringe or dosing cup is far more accurate. Studies show 17% dosing error rate with spoons vs. 3% with mL syringes. The FDA recommends mL-only labeling for all liquid medications.

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