Grams to cups

Self-rising flour grams to cups

1 US cup of self-rising flour = 120 g.
To convert grams to cups, divide the grams by 120. For example, 100 g of self-rising flour ≈ 0.83 cup.

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Why this matters: A cup of flour, sugar, butter and honey do not weigh the same.

Self-rising flour is soft wheat flour pre-blended with baking powder and salt, so 1 US cup weighs about 120 grams. Because the leavening is mixed in by volume, weighing it is the only way to keep your rise consistent batch to batch.

Self-rising flour grams to cups chart (US cup)

GramsCups (approx.)Decimal cups
25 g0.21 cup0.21
50 g0.42 cup0.42
75 g0.62 cup0.62
100 g0.83 cup0.83
125 g1 cup1.04
150 g1¼ cups1.25
175 g1.46 cups1.46
200 g1⅔ cups1.67
250 g2.08 cups2.08
300 g2½ cups2.5
400 g3⅓ cups3.33
500 g4.17 cups4.17

Why self-rising flour weighs what it does

Self-rising flour is milled from soft, low-protein wheat (often around 8-9% protein), which packs less densely than bread flour, landing near 120 g per cup. But the real variable is the built-in leavening: roughly 1.5 teaspoons of baking powder and a pinch of salt are distributed throughout, and that powder can settle or compact in the bag over time. Brands like White Lily run lighter and fluffier, while UK self-raising flour skips the salt, so a scooped cup can swing 110-130 g depending on how packed and how fresh the bag is.

How to measure self-rising flour

Never dip the cup into the bag with self-rising flour. Scooping compresses both the flour and the leavening, packing in 20-30 g extra and throwing off the baking powder ratio. Instead, fluff the flour first, spoon it lightly into the cup, and level with a straight edge. Weighing 120 g is far more reliable.

Common mistake

Treating self-rising and all-purpose flour as interchangeable by weight. They weigh similarly per cup, but self-rising carries baking powder and salt, so swapping it into a recipe with its own leavening doubles the rise, then collapses. Also, an old bag loses lift as the baking powder dies.

Other cup sizes

Cup type1 cup of self-rising flour
US cup (240 ml)120 g
Metric cup (250 ml)125 g
Australian / South African cup (250 ml)125 g
Imperial cup (284 ml)142 g

Where it matters

Self-rising flour shines in Southern biscuits, scones, quick breads, pancakes, and 2- and 3-ingredient doughs where the leavening is meant to be built in. Getting 120 g right matters most in biscuits and scones, where too much flour means dense, dry results and the wrong powder ratio leaves a metallic, soapy aftertaste.

FAQ

Can I make my own self-rising flour?

Yes. For each cup (120 g) of all-purpose flour, whisk in 1.5 teaspoons baking powder and 0.25 teaspoon salt. Use it promptly, since freshly mixed baking powder gives the most reliable lift.

Is 1 cup of self-rising flour really 120 grams?

About 120 g for a properly spoon-and-leveled US cup. Lighter Southern brands like White Lily can come in closer to 110 g, while a packed cup can hit 130 g or more.

Does self-rising flour expire?

The flour itself lasts months, but the baking powder in it weakens over time. After 6-12 months an opened bag may bake flat, so buy smaller quantities if you use it occasionally.

Why weigh self-rising flour instead of using cups?

Because the leavening is mixed in by volume, an over-scooped cup adds both extra flour and extra baking powder at once, which is why weighing 120 g keeps both the texture and the rise consistent.