200 grams to cups
200 grams is a substantial amount whose cup value depends entirely on the chosen ingredient.
Two hundred grams is a hearty, full-portion measure used for the main flour or sugar in many bakes. Because a cup of each ingredient weighs something different, 200g of flour and 200g of sugar finish at noticeably different cup levels.
Instant baking converter
Convert by ingredient, cup size and unit. Works with decimals and fractions like 1 1/2 or ¾.
200 grams to cups by ingredient
| Ingredient | 200 g in cups | Decimal |
|---|---|---|
| All-purpose flour | 1⅔ cups | 1.67 |
| Bread flour | 1⅔ cups | 1.67 |
| Cake flour | 1¾ cups | 1.75 |
| Almond flour | 2.08 cups | 2.08 |
| Granulated sugar | 1 cup | 1 |
| Packed brown sugar | ⅞ cup | 0.91 |
| Powdered sugar | 1⅔ cups | 1.67 |
| Butter | ⅞ cup | 0.88 |
| Cocoa powder | 2⅓ cups | 2.35 |
| Rolled oats | 2¼ cups | 2.22 |
| Honey | 0.59 cup | 0.59 |
| Milk | 0.82 cup | 0.82 |
| Vegetable oil | 0.92 cup | 0.92 |
Two hundred grams is a tidy metric staple, and notably it equals almost exactly one US cup of granulated sugar, which is why it appears so often in sugar-forward recipes. That neat sugar coincidence hides how differently lighter ingredients behave at the same weight. While 200 g of granulated sugar (about 200 g per cup) is essentially 1 cup, 200 g of all-purpose flour (about 120 g per cup) is about 1.67 cups, far more volume for the identical mass. Airy cocoa powder (about 85 g per cup) expands 200 g to roughly 2.35 cups, and dense butter (about 227 g per cup) shrinks to just under 0.9 cup. So even though sugar makes 200 g look like a clean one-cup figure, that shortcut fails for flour, cocoa, or butter. Match the weight to the specific ingredient every time.
Cups measure volume and grams measure weight, so there is no single grams-to-cups number, always pick the ingredient. Choose it in the calculator above to switch cup sizes too.