Cake pan and baking sheet size converter

Enter your current and target pan sizes to get the scaling factor in seconds.

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How to use

  1. Enter the original (From) and target (To) pan shape, size, and unit.
  2. Choose area or volume mode and add height if needed.
  3. Use the factor to scale your batter or ingredient amounts.

Enter pan sizes

Fractions like 8 1/2 are supported. Pan dimensions vary by brand, so use inner sizes when possible. Changing the unit does not auto-convert numbers (e.g., 8 cm → 8 in).

From (original pan)

To (target pan)

Conversion mode
Area vs. volume

Area mode assumes the same batter height. Volume mode uses height for a more accurate batter volume match.

Results

Factor (To / From)
--x
Inverse factor (From / To)
--x
Percent
--
If you keep batter amount the same in area mode, thickness changes by the inverse factor.
Similar size presets
Presets are sorted by how close the factor is to 1.
Scale ingredient list (optional)

Enter ingredient amounts to see scaled values. Everything stays in your browser.

Ingredient Amount Scaled

Notes

FAQ

What is the difference between area and volume mode?

Area mode assumes the same batter height. Volume mode uses pan height to match batter volume more precisely.

Should I enter inner or outer dimensions?

Use inner dimensions if you know them. Pan shapes and corner curves vary by brand, so treat results as estimates.

How do I convert a round pan to a square pan?

The scaling factor is based on bottom area. A larger factor means more batter; the same amount would bake thinner.

Does a different pan size change bake time?

Thicker batter usually needs more time and thinner batter less time. Adjust by checking color and internal doneness.

How do I apply the factor to ingredients?

Multiply ingredient amounts by the factor. You can also paste ingredients into the recipe scaler tool to scale everything at once.

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