Baking Soda Grams to Fluid Ounces

100 grams of baking soda is 2.778 fluid ounces using the ingredient-specific density used for this converter.

Direct Answer

1 g of Baking Soda equals 0.028 fl oz

fluid ounces = grams ÷ 36

250 g = 6.944 fl oz

Converter Calculator

0.028 Fluid Ounces

Switch

Explanation

This page handles the reverse question for baking soda: starting from grams and estimating fluid ounces. It uses the same fluid-ounce density conversion as the mirror page, only in reverse, so both directions stay aligned.

That is useful when labels or recipes start from grams but your measuring workflow still uses fluid ounces. That is especially useful in baking, where small measuring differences can change rise, set, and texture. Baking Soda can vary with fineness, aeration, and settling, so the page keeps one fixed basis for repeatable measuring.

Method & Density Basis

  • Method basis: reverse fluid-ounce conversion anchored to 36 g per US fluid ounce.
  • Applied factor: 1 Gram = 0.028 Fluid Ounces.
  • Consistency rule: direct answer, calculator, FAQ, and table use the same ingredient-specific basis.

Common Conversion Values

GramsFluid Ounces
25 0.694
50 1.389
75 2.083
100 2.778
150 4.167
200 5.556
250 6.944
500 13.889

Frequently Asked Questions

How many fluid ounces is 100 g of Baking Soda?

100 g of Baking Soda is 2.778 fl oz based on the density reference for Baking Soda.

Does this use the same density basis as the Fluid Ounces To Grams page?

Yes. The mirror page uses the same fluid-ounce density conversion, only in the opposite direction.

Does sifting or settling change the result for Baking Soda?

Baking Soda uses one fixed reference basis here, but powder fineness, aeration, and settling can change how much fits in a spoon or cup. Keep the measuring method consistent for repeatable baking results.

How many fluid ounces is 250 g of Baking Soda?

250 g of Baking Soda is 6.944 fl oz based on the density reference for Baking Soda.

How do I convert Baking Soda fluid ounces back to grams?

Use the mirror Fluid Ounces To Grams page; it applies the same fluid-ounce density conversion in reverse to return grams.