1 gram of Table Salt in teaspoons

1 gram of table salt = 0.17 teaspoons. That's based on a 292 g per cup baseline. Because table salt can shift with brand and measuring style, weighing is usually more accurate than measuring by volume.

Reviewed by CupOrGram Editorial TeamData methodology: NIST-derived density references + recipe testing notesMethodology
Answer
0.17 teaspoons
Based on table salt density of 1.22 g/ml
Source: NIST-DB-72
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Ingredient Guide

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Open the full ingredient guide for density notes, common cup weights, and the most-used conversion paths.

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Table Salt substitutions

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Quick Reference Table

gramsteaspoons
10 grams1.7 teaspoons
25 grams4.2 teaspoons
50 grams8.3 teaspoons
100 grams16.6 teaspoons
150 grams24.9 teaspoons
200 grams33.3 teaspoons
250 grams41.6 teaspoons
500 grams83.1 teaspoons

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Ingredient-specific, density-based conversions for baking

0.17
teaspoons
Ingredient-specific · density-based
Density-specific references, not generic cup charts · NIST-DB-72

Why this conversion varies

Table Salt can vary by brand and measuring style.

  • Table Salt may settle, compress, or pour differently based on handling.
  • table salt can shift with temperature and ingredient texture.
  • This page uses a consistent 292 g per cup baseline for repeatable conversions.

Why this conversion matters

Table Salt can behave differently by brand and handling. Converting table salt with a consistent baseline gives you a more dependable starting point for scaling recipes.

Practical baking use

Fine-grained iodized salt. Essential in all baking for flavour and gluten strengthening. Use this conversion as a practical starting point for scaling recipes with table salt.

  • If consistency matters, verify with a small test batch first.
  • Use weight-based measurements when precision is critical.

FAQ

How much is 1 gram of table salt in teaspoons?

1 gram of table salt is 0.17 teaspoons using a 292 g per cup baseline.

Why can table salt conversion values vary in home kitchens?

Table Salt can vary by brand and measuring style. In practice, brand and measuring style can shift results between kitchens.

Is it better to weigh table salt for baking?

Usually yes. Weight-based measuring reduces shifts from brand and measuring style, so your results are more repeatable.

Related links for Table Salt

Recipe Context for Table Salt

For chemical leavening: small weight changes alter rise and browning.

For quick breads: over-leavening can cause collapse after oven spring.

For cookies: balance leavening with acid source for predictable spread.

Common Pitfalls

  • Switching brands without re-checking weight can change texture and bake time.
  • Using volume-only measurements for dense ingredients can overshoot recipe targets.
  • Expired leaveners can underperform even when measured correctly.

Brand Variance Example

Baseline on this page: 1 cup table salt = 292g. Real-world range can shift by about 6% because fine powders and leaveners settle during storage, changing cup density.

Example for 2 cups: baseline 584g, common range 548g-620g. If your bake is texture-sensitive, start with the lower bound and adjust after a test batch.

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