Baking Powder — Cups to Grams

1 cup baking powder = 230 grams | 1 teaspoon = 4.8 grams

Result
230grams

1 cup Baking Powder = 230 grams

Tablespoons16
Teaspoons47.9
Ounces8.11

Quick Conversion Table — Baking Powder

CupsGramsTablespoonsTeaspoons
¼57.5 g3.99 tbsp12 tsp
76.7 g5.33 tbsp16 tsp
½115 g7.99 tbsp24 tsp
153.3 g10.6 tbsp31.9 tsp
¾172.5 g12 tbsp35.9 tsp
1230 g16 tbsp47.9 tsp
345 g24 tbsp71.9 tsp
2460 g31.9 tbsp95.8 tsp
3690 g47.9 tbsp143.8 tsp
4920 g63.9 tbsp191.7 tsp

How to Measure Baking Powder Accurately

Baking powder is almost always called for in teaspoon quantities — rarely tablespoons, never cups in home baking. This makes it one of the most important ingredients to measure precisely, because small absolute errors create large percentage errors. Being 0.5g off on 4.8g of baking powder is a 10% error — significant enough to affect leavening in a delicate cake.

The correct technique: use a dry measuring spoon (not a liquid teaspoon, which can vary in volume). Dip the spoon into the baking powder, then level off the excess with a straight edge — a table knife, a skewer, or even your finger across the top of the spoon. Do not heap, tap, or shake the spoon to settle the powder — heap and tap can add 15–20% more baking powder than leveled. Do not shake the container to loosen clumps before measuring without also stirring, as settling increases density.

Critically: never use a wet or damp spoon. Moisture activates baking powder's acid-base reaction immediately — the CO2 it would have produced in the oven escapes into the air instead, leaving you with spent leavener in the container. If you've stirred a batter and need to add baking powder, wipe the spoon completely dry before dipping into the container.

Pro tip: When scaling recipes, convert baking powder to grams for precision. If a recipe calls for 2½ teaspoons (12g) of baking powder and you want to make 1.5× the recipe, you need 18g — which is impossible to measure accurately with a ½-teaspoon spoon without a scale. Weigh it directly into the flour.

Baking Powder in Baking: Why Precision Matters

Baking powder is a double-acting leavener composed of three components: a base (sodium bicarbonate, 25–30% by weight), an acid (cream of tartar, sodium aluminum sulfate, or monocalcium phosphate, 30–35% by weight), and a starch buffer (cornstarch, 30–40% by weight) that absorbs moisture and prevents premature reaction. When wet, the acid and base dissolve and react to produce CO2. The first reaction occurs in the batter; the second, larger reaction occurs when heat activates the slow-acting acid during baking.

The correct ratio of baking powder to flour is approximately 1 teaspoon (4.8g) per 1 cup (120g) of flour — a 4% ratio by weight. This produces enough CO2 to leaven the batter without exceeding the structural capacity of the gluten-egg network. Both too much and too little cause predictable and specific failures.

Too much baking powder — even 50% excess (1.5 tsp where 1 tsp is needed) — causes rapid CO2 production that outpaces the structure-setting proteins. Bubbles expand so fast that they merge, forming a few large bubbles instead of many small ones. These large bubbles burst and collapse before the eggs and proteins coagulate at around 160°F / 71°C, producing a cake that rises dramatically in the first 5 minutes of baking and then sinks in the center as the overexpanded bubbles collapse. The center remains dense and gummy. The top cracks from the rapid initial rise, and the crumb has an irregular, coarse texture with large voids.

Too little baking powder produces the opposite: insufficient CO2 means the batter doesn't expand enough, resulting in a flat, dense cake with compact crumb and little height. Cakes with adequate leavening have open, even crumb structure; under-leavened cakes have tight, bread-like texture despite identical flour content. The Maillard browning on the surface is also affected — flat cakes with less surface area expansion develop thicker, darker crusts relative to their volume.

The starch component of baking powder (typically cornstarch) dilutes the reactive components to make small measurements more manageable and reduces the hygroscopic clumping that pure sodium bicarbonate and acid mixtures experience. It does not contribute to leavening but does extend shelf life by absorbing ambient moisture before the acid and base can react with it.

Baking Powder vs. Baking Soda: Weights and Uses

Leavener1 tsp WeightRequires Acid?Strength vs BP
Baking powder (double-acting)4.8gNo (self-contained)1× (baseline)
Baking soda6.0gYes (mandatory)3–4× stronger per gram
Cream of tartar3.0gn/a (is the acid)Acid only
Yeast (instant)3.1gNo (biological)Slower, more complex

Baking soda is 3–4× more powerful than baking powder per gram — 1 teaspoon (6g) of baking soda can produce the same leavening as 3–4 teaspoons (14.4–19.2g) of baking powder. But baking soda requires an acid in the recipe to activate. When a recipe uses both baking powder and baking soda, the baking soda is neutralizing excess acid (from buttermilk, lemon juice, etc.) while the baking powder handles the primary leavening. The ratio is always precise — more baking soda than the acid can neutralize leaves unreacted soda in the baked good, producing a metallic, soapy off-flavor detectable even at ¼ teaspoon excess.

Troubleshooting: When Baking Powder Goes Wrong

Cake sinks in the center after coming out of the oven perfectly risen. Classic sign of too much baking powder. The CO2 production outpaced the protein coagulation — the structure formed too late to support the expanded volume. The top of the cake set, but the center remained liquid long enough to collapse as the structure fell. Fix: use a scale to verify your teaspoon measurements, and check that your oven temperature is accurate (a sunken center can also result from an oven 25°F too cool, where proteins set too slowly).

Baked goods taste metallic or soapy. Two possible causes: excess baking soda (which leaves a strong alkaline taste detectable at very low levels), or baking powder that contains sodium aluminum sulfate (SAS). Some bakers are sensitive to SAS — look for aluminum-free baking powder if you consistently notice a metallic aftertaste, particularly in biscuits and pancakes made with recipes that use large amounts.

Muffins peaked and cracked but are dry and dense inside. This typically means either too much flour (see flour page) or baking powder that had lost potency. Spent baking powder produced insufficient CO2 to fully leaven the batter — the heat created the initial structure before enough expansion could occur, trapping the batter in a dense, compact form. The peaked top is from steam escaping, not from leavening. Test your baking powder before use if it's been open more than 6 months.

Pancakes are flat and rubbery with no bubbles forming on the surface. Bubbles on the surface of pancake batter are CO2 escaping from the baking powder reaction — they signal when to flip. No bubbles usually mean the baking powder is dead or the batter was overmixed. Overmixing pancake batter develops gluten and bursts the CO2 bubbles as they form, producing flat, tough pancakes. Mix only until just combined — lumps are fine.

Common Questions About Baking Powder

Baking Powder Conversion Table

CupsGramsOunces
¼ cup58 g2.05 oz
⅓ cup77 g2.72 oz
½ cup115 g4.06 oz
⅔ cup153 g5.40 oz
¾ cup173 g6.10 oz
1 cup230 g8.11 oz
1½ cups345 g12.17 oz
2 cups460 g16.23 oz
3 cups690 g24.34 oz
4 cups920 g32.45 oz

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