A Pressure Converter is a tool that translates measurements of pressure from one unit to another. Pressure is force per unit area, and it's measured in many different units around the world. Common units include PSI (pounds per square inch) used in the US, Bar used in Europe and many industrial applications, Pascal (the SI unit), and Atmospheres (atm) used in science and diving. This converter handles these and often includes millibar, torr, and inches of mercury. You enter a number, select the unit you have, and choose the unit you want. The tool calculates the equivalent value instantly.
Here is how it works. You type a number into the input field. You pick the unit of that number from a dropdown (like PSI). Then you pick the target unit (like Bar). The tool multiplies or divides using the correct conversion factor. For example, 1 PSI = 0.0689476 Bar. 1 Atmosphere = 14.6959 PSI. The result appears immediately. You can copy it or clear and start over. Some converters also handle scientific notation for very large or small numbers.
Who uses this? Engineers use it constantly—mechanical, civil, and aerospace engineers all need to convert pressure units. Mechanics use it for tire pressure, fuel systems, and hydraulic systems. Meteorologists use it for atmospheric pressure readings. Scuba divers use it to understand pressure at depth. HVAC technicians use it for refrigerant pressures. Scientists use it in labs. Students use it for physics and chemistry homework. Anyone dealing with gases, liquids, or forces on surfaces encounters different pressure units.
Benefits are about accuracy and bridging different measurement systems. A tire pressure gauge might read in PSI, but a European car manual specifies pressure in Bar. Converting ensures you inflate to the correct pressure. The same for industrial equipment—specs might be in different units depending on where it was manufactured. This tool eliminates mental math errors and saves time. It also helps with understanding relationships, like how 1 atmosphere is about 14.7 PSI, which is standard sea-level pressure.
Common use cases include:
The tool typically includes: pound per square inch (PSI), bar, millibar (mbar), pascal (Pa), kilopascal (kPa), megapascal (MPa), atmosphere (atm), torr (same as mm Hg), and inches of mercury (inHg). It handles both small and large numbers with ease. All calculations are done in your browser for privacy—your data is not sent to any server.
| User | Problem | How This Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanic | European car manual specifies tire pressure in Bar, but gauge reads PSI | Converts to ensure correct inflation. |
| HVAC Technician | System pressures in manual are in PSI, but manifold gauge reads in kPa | Converts to diagnose properly. |
| Scuba Diver | Needs to understand pressure at depth in atmospheres vs. PSI | Converts to plan dives safely. |
| Meteorologist | Weather data in millibar needs to be converted to inches of mercury for public reports | Uses converter for accurate reporting. |