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Cup to grams

1 cup of active dry yeast in grams — 192 g.

Exact gram weight of active dry yeast by volume, a quick-reference conversion chart from 1 tablespoon to 3 cups, and the editorial reasoning behind the number.
VolumeActive dry yeast (grams)
1 tablespoon12 g
¼ cup48 g
⅓ cup64 g
½ cup96 g
⅔ cup128 g
¾ cup144 g
1 cup192 g
1½ cups288 g
2 cups384 g
3 cups576 g

Why 192 g per cup

Active dry yeast and instant yeast share the same density (192 g/cup) and are nearly interchangeable in recipes. Active dry needs blooming in warm water first; instant goes straight in.

Leaveners — baking soda, baking powder, yeast — are used in such small quantities (rarely more than 2 tsp per recipe) that precise weighing is overkill for most home bakers. The cup figure listed here is useful only for sanity-checking; you should never need to measure these by the cup.

The most accurate way to measure active dry yeast

For recipes where the outcome matters — bakes, doughs, anything leavened — measure active dry yeast on a kitchen scale set to grams. Set the bowl on the scale, press tare to zero, then add until the readout matches the gram value the recipe calls for. This removes the largest source of cup-to-cup variation: how you scoop.

The cup-based numbers on this page assume the “spoon and level” method — fluffing the ingredient in its container, spooning it into the cup, and levelling the top with a straight edge. Scooping directly with the cup packs more in, and can push the gram value up by 20-30 % for fluffy ingredients like flour and cocoa.

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Convert any quantity, any direction

This page covers the exact value for active dry yeast. For arbitrary inputs (e.g. 67 g → cups, or 2½ tbsp → grams), or for other ingredients, use the full ingredient density converter.

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