PSIG to kPa Conversion Formula, Chart and Examples

PSIG to KPA

Convert psig into kilopascals for gauges, specs, hydraulic notes, and pressure reference checks.

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Conversion Formula

PSIG to KPAkPa = psig × 6.894757293
Kilopascals to PSIGpsig = kPa ÷ 6.894757293

Conversion Examples

5 PSIG5 psig equals 34.473786465 kilopascals. This is a clear checkpoint when a gauge face and a spec sheet use different pressure units.
25 PSIGWhen the starting value is 25 psig, the converted result becomes 172.368932325 kilopascals. That makes it easier to compare vacuum, process, or hydraulic readings without redoing the factor by hand.
100 PSIGA value of 100 psig converts to 689.4757293 kilopascals. This mid-range example matches the kind of number that appears in many plant service notes.
1,000 PSIGIf you begin with 1,000 psig, you end up with 6,894.757293 kilopascals. It is a practical reference for keeping mixed SI and customary pressure data aligned.

PSIG to KPA Table

PSIGKilopascals
16.894757293
534.473786465
1068.94757293
25172.368932325
50344.73786465
100689.4757293
2501,723.68932325
5003,447.3786465
1,0006,894.757293
2,50017,236.8932325

Popular Conversions

What is PSIG and Kilopascal?

PSIG

Definition: PSIG means pounds per square inch gauge and measures pressure relative to ambient atmosphere.

History/origin: Gauge notation grew with dial gauges and plant instruments that read above local atmospheric pressure.

Current use: PSIG is used in shop air, hydraulics, tanks, and most everyday pressure gauges.

Kilopascal

Definition: A kilopascal is one thousand pascals.

History/origin: The kilopascal became a practical engineering pressure unit because the base pascal is often too small for everyday systems.

Current use: Kilopascals are used in tires, hydraulics, HVAC, and weather data.

Related Pressure Conversions

Pressure values are commonly translated across SI, customary, and fluid-column units in the same job.

Related ConversionFactor or RuleFormula
mmHg to kPa× 0.133322387kPa = mmHg × 0.133322387
MPa to psi× 145.037738psi = MPa × 145.037738
Pa to kPa÷ 1,000kPa = Pa ÷ 1,000
Pa to psi× 0.000145037738psi = Pa × 0.000145037738
psi to bar× 0.068947573bar = psi × 0.068947573
psi to mmHg× 51.714933mmHg = psi × 51.714933
psia to psigminus atmospherepsig = psia – atmospheric pressure
psig to psiaplus atmospherepsia = psig + atmospheric pressure

Typical Use Cases

Gauge readingConvert pressure values when a gauge, datasheet, and worksheet all use different scales.
Hydraulic setupCheck system pressure in the unit expected by pumps, regulators, or component specs.
Vacuum and lab workMove between mercury, torr, and SI pressure units without redoing the full factor math.
Maintenance logsKeep readings consistent across service notes, test sheets, and equipment histories.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the difference between PSIG and PSIA?

A: PSIG is gauge pressure measured relative to atmospheric pressure, while PSIA is absolute pressure measured from a vacuum reference. That is why the two numbers are not interchangeable even before any other unit change is applied.

Q: What is a useful checkpoint for PSIG to KPA?

A: 1 psig equals 6.894757293 kilopascals, which is a practical reference when checking a gauge reading against an absolute-pressure calculation.

Q: Why does atmospheric pressure matter on these pages?

A: Because one scale includes the surrounding atmospheric pressure and the other does not. The zero point is different, so the converted number changes accordingly.

Q: When do engineers need PSIG and PSIA conversions?

A: They come up in compressors, vacuum systems, thermodynamic calculations, pressure vessels, process equipment, and any worksheet that mixes gauge and absolute pressure.

Q: How do I convert Kilopascals back into PSIG?

A: psig = kPa ÷ 6.894757293. Use the reverse rule carefully so the gauge-versus-absolute reference stays consistent.

Q: Is this exact?

A: The calculation uses an exact factor.