Convert weight and mass units — kilograms, pounds, ounces, grams, tons, stones.
| Unit | Name | Value |
|---|---|---|
| kg | Kilogram | 0.000001 |
| g | Gram | 0.001 |
| t | Metric Ton | 1.000000e-9 |
| lb | Pound | 0.0000022046244 |
| oz | Ounce | 0.000035273991 |
| st | Stone | 1.5747312e-7 |
The Milligram (mg) and the Metric Ton (t) are both units of weight & mass. Converting between them is straightforward using the formula above.
Formula: 1 mg = 1.000000e-9 t
This converter uses internationally recognized conversion factors. All calculations are performed client-side in your browser — no data is sent to any server.
| Milligram (mg) | Metric Ton (t) | Real-world context |
|---|---|---|
| 1 mg | 1.0000e-09 t | |
| 1000 mg | 1.0000e-06 t | 1 gram |
| 1,000,000 mg | 0.001 t | |
| 1.0000e+09 mg | 1 t | |
| 1.0000e+12 mg | 1000 t |
1 milligram (mg) equals exactly 1.0000e-09 metric tons (t). Use the formula: mg × 1.0000e-09 = t.
To convert milligrams to metric tons, multiply your value in milligrams by 1.0000e-09. For example, 5 mg × 1.0000e-09 = 5.0000e-09 t.
100 milligrams = 1.0000e-07 metric tons. Calculation: 100 × 1.0000e-09 = 1.0000e-07.
To convert metric tons back to milligrams, divide by 1.0000e-09 (or multiply by 1,000,000,000). Example: 10 t ÷ 1.0000e-09 = 1.0000e+10 mg.
Yes. This converter uses the internationally recognised exact conversion factor: 1 mg = 1.0000e-09 t. All calculations are performed in your browser with no rounding until display.
10 milligrams = 1.0000e-08 metric tons. Simply multiply by 1.0000e-09.
Converting milligrams to metric tons is commonly needed for medical dosing, laboratory measurements, pharmaceutical calculations, and quality control testing where one system uses mg and another uses t.
The milligram (mg) is a unit of mass equal to one-thousandth of a gram (0.001 g) or one-millionth of a kilogram (10⁻⁶ kg). It is the standard unit for drug dosing in medicine and pharmacology, where precise small quantities are critical for safety and efficacy. The prefix "milli-" comes from Latin mille meaning one thousand.
The metric ton (tonne, symbol t) equals exactly 1,000 kilograms or 1,000,000 grams. Not an SI unit but derived from the kilogram, it is used globally for large-scale measurements in shipping, agriculture, mining, and manufacturing. In the US, "metric ton" or "tonne" distinguishes it from the US short ton (2,000 lb ≈ 907 kg) and UK long ton (2,240 lb ≈ 1,016 kg).
Established as a derived unit when the metric system was formalised in the late 18th century. The milligram rose to critical importance with the growth of pharmacology in the 19th and 20th centuries, as chemists isolated active compounds and found that tiny quantities produced strong therapeutic — or toxic — effects. Modern pharmacopoeias worldwide specify drug doses in milligrams.
Interesting fact: A single grain of table salt weighs about 58 mg. One standard 325 mg aspirin tablet means that 1,000 tablets weigh only 325 grams — less than a can of soft drink.
The tonne was introduced alongside the metric system in late 18th-century France and incorporated into the International System as an accepted non-SI unit. Its name (with final "e") was adopted to avoid confusion with British and American ton units. As international trade standardised on metric units through the 20th century, the metric ton became the global benchmark for commodity markets in grain, oil, steel, and other bulk goods.
Interesting fact: A standard ISO shipping container (20-foot TEU) can carry approximately 21–24 metric tons of cargo. The global annual steel production is about 1.9 billion metric tons — roughly 240 kg for every person on Earth.