EXACT.RESULT
10 Tablespoons to Millilitres
10 tbsp converted to ml. Full working, formula and reference table below.
- Category
- volume
- Input
- 10 tbsp
- Output
- 200
Tablespoon
Millilitre
OTHER AMOUNTS
tbsp → mlTablespoon to Millilitre Conversion Table
Common tablespoon to millilitre values for quick reference.
| Tablespoon | Millilitre |
|---|---|
| 1 | 20 |
| 2 | 40 |
| 5 | 100 |
| 10 | 200 |
| 25 | 500 |
| 50 | 1,000 |
| 100 | 2,000 |
| 250 | 5,000 |
| 500 | 10,000 |
| 1000 | 20,000 |
When you'd actually use this
Where you'd actually use tablespoon → millilitre in everyday Australian life.
Cooking from overseas recipes
American and British cookbooks rarely use the same volume units as Australian ones.
Online shopping
Product specs from US stores often list volume in imperial units.
Travel and fitness apps
Apps that default to a different region may show volume you need to translate.
Conversion Formula
To convert Tablespoon to Millilitre, multiply the tablespoon value by 20. This factor represents how many millilitre are equivalent to one tablespoon.
Formula
Millilitre = Tablespoon × 20Inverse (converting back)
Tablespoon = Millilitre × 0.05How to Convert Tablespoon to Millilitre
Convert tablespoon to millilitre in three steps. The relationship is a single multiplication, so once you know the factor you can do it in your head for round numbers.
Start with your value
Take the number of tablespoon you want to convert.
Multiply by the factor
Multiply the value by 20.
Read your answer
The result is the equivalent in millilitre.
Worked example
10 tablespoon = 200 millilitre
10 × 20 = 200 millilitre.
What is a Tablespoon?
An Australian tablespoon is 20 millilitres — larger than the US and UK 15 ml tablespoon.
Origin
Defined by the Australian Government Publishing Service in the 1970s as 4 teaspoons.
Notable uses
- Australian recipes
- Bartending guides (AU)
What is a Millilitre?
A millilitre is one thousandth of a litre, the everyday metric unit for small liquid volumes.
Origin
Part of the original metric system defined in France in 1795.
Notable uses
- Beverages
- Medicine dosing
- Cooking liquids