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API Gravity to SG Converter — Oil Converter
API Gravity Converter
Oil & Gas
0
Inputs
Formula
01

What this converter does

This converter turns API gravity into specific gravity and back. Because API is defined as a reciprocal of SG, the relationship is a formula, not a fixed factor — water is 10°API heavier than 40°API light crude. Type a value and read the result instantly.

Crude above 10°API floats on water; lighter (higher-API) crude is more valuable. A 40°API oil has an SG of about 0.825.

02

The units it covers

API gravity and specific gravity both describe how heavy a crude oil is relative to water.

View all units & their values
UnitSymbolValueMainly used
API gravity°API141.5/SG−131.5US petroleum industry scale
Specific gravitySG141.5/(API+131.5)Density relative to water at 60°F
03

The formula

The two scales are reciprocally related through the API definition, not a fixed factor:

Conversion
SG = 141.5 ÷ (API + 131.5)

Where:

  • API = the API gravity in degrees
  • SG = specific gravity relative to water at 60°F
  • 141.5 / 131.5 = the API scale constants
04

Worked example

Convert 40°API to specific gravity.

Step 1 · The formula
SG = 141.5 ÷ (API + 131.5)
Step 2 · Substitute
141.5 ÷ (40 + 131.5) = 0.825

So a 40°API light crude has a specific gravity of about 0.825.

05

The units in this example

API gravitysymbol: °API

The American Petroleum Institute scale for how heavy or light a crude oil is; higher means lighter and generally more valuable.

Common API ↔ SG values
  • 10°API = 1.000 SG (water)
  • 31.1°API ≈ 0.870 SG (medium)
  • 40°API ≈ 0.825 SG (light)
  • API = 141.5/SG − 131.5
Specific gravitysymbol: SG

Density of the oil relative to water at 60°F. Below 1.0 floats on water; above 1.0 sinks.

Common API ↔ SG values
  • 1.000 SG = 10°API
  • 0.900 SG ≈ 25.7°API
  • 0.825 SG ≈ 40°API
  • SG = 141.5/(API+131.5)
06

FAQ

QWhat is 40 API in specific gravity?
A 40°API crude has a specific gravity of about 0.825 at 60°F.
QWhy use API gravity?
It grades crude oil — higher API means lighter, easier-to-refine, more valuable oil.
08

Sources

US EIA — petroleum · NIST SP 811

InfoCalculator Editorial Team Fact-checked
Updated Jul 2026 · 3 min read · Reviewed by the InfoCalculator editorial team