US teaspoon to Imperial tablespoon

tsp

1 tsp

imp tbsp

0.27755806154658011607 imp tbsp

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Quick Reference Table (US teaspoon to Imperial tablespoon)

US teaspoon (tsp)Imperial tablespoon (imp tbsp)
0.250.06938951538664502902
0.50.13877903077329005804
10.27755806154658011607
20.55511612309316023214
30.83267418463974034822
61.66534836927948069643

About US teaspoon (tsp)

The US teaspoon (tsp) is a unit of culinary volume equal to approximately 4.929 milliliters, one third of a US tablespoon. It is one of the smallest standard US customary volume units, used in cooking, baking, and medicine for small ingredient quantities. The US teaspoon differs from the metric teaspoon (exactly 5 mL) and the imperial teaspoon (about 5.92 mL). In medicine, 5 mL is the standardized dosing teaspoon.

A standard dose of liquid children's medicine is one 5 mL teaspoon. A recipe calling for 1 tsp of vanilla extract uses about 4.93 mL.

About Imperial tablespoon (imp tbsp)

The imperial tablespoon is a unit of volume equal to approximately 17.758 milliliters, defined as five-eighths of an imperial fluid ounce. It is used in older UK and Commonwealth cooking recipes. The imperial tablespoon is larger than the US tablespoon (14.787 mL) but smaller than the Australian tablespoon (20 mL). Modern British and Commonwealth recipes have replaced it with the 15 mL metric tablespoon, but it persists in pre-metrication cookbooks.

Older British recipe books specify tablespoons of approximately 17.8 mL — larger than a US tablespoon but smaller than an Australian one.


US teaspoon – Frequently Asked Questions

One US teaspoon equals approximately 4.929 mL, typically rounded to 5 mL in medicine and 4.93 mL in precise culinary conversions. The metric teaspoon used in Australia and Canada is exactly 5 mL.

A US teaspoon is about 4.93 mL; an imperial (UK) teaspoon is about 5.92 mL — approximately 20% larger. This difference can affect recipes crossing US and UK sources, particularly for spices and leavening agents.

In the US system, 3 teaspoons equal 1 tablespoon (3 × 4.929 mL = 14.787 mL). The metric equivalent is the same ratio: 3 × 5 mL = 15 mL tablespoon.

Not exactly. Medicine dosing uses a standardized 5 mL teaspoon, while the US cooking teaspoon is about 4.93 mL. For medication accuracy, always use a calibrated oral syringe rather than a kitchen teaspoon, which can vary from 3 to 7 mL.

There are 48 US teaspoons in one US cup: 1 cup = 16 tablespoons = 48 teaspoons.

Imperial tablespoon – Frequently Asked Questions

One imperial tablespoon equals approximately 17.758 mL — larger than the US tablespoon (14.79 mL) and smaller than the Australian tablespoon (20 mL). Modern UK metric tablespoons are standardized at 15 mL.

Leavening failure. Baking powder and baking soda are measured in tablespoons, and the difference between a US tablespoon (14.8 mL), an imperial tablespoon (17.8 mL), and an Australian tablespoon (20 mL) is 15–35%. Too much baking soda makes bread taste metallic and soapy; too little and it does not rise. A British grandmother's scone recipe used in an American kitchen with US tablespoons will under-leaven by 20%. Professional bakers avoid this entirely by weighing leavening agents in grams.

No. Modern UK cooking uses 15 mL metric tablespoons. The imperial tablespoon (17.76 mL) appears only in pre-1970s British cookbooks.

One imperial tablespoon equals 3 imperial teaspoons (each ≈ 5.92 mL), giving 3 × 5.92 = 17.76 mL. The same 3:1 ratio as in US and metric systems, though the absolute sizes differ.

The Australian tablespoon is 20 mL — the largest of the major English-language cooking tablespoons. Australian recipes therefore use fewer tablespoon counts than US or UK recipes for the same volume.

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