Tablespoons to Ounces Vegetable Oil Cooking Size Chart
This chart converts vegetable oil between tablespoons and ounces, covering 9 measurements from tablespoons 2 up to tablespoons 32. Because vegetable oil has a specific density that differs from other ingredients, these conversions apply only to vegetable oil — do not use them for other ingredients.
In baking and cooking, precision matters. A recipe calling for tablespoons 2 of vegetable oil needs exactly ounces 0.9 — using a conversion for a different ingredient could throw off the balance of your recipe. Our chart accounts for the actual weight-to-volume ratio of vegetable oil.
Quick Converter
| Tablespoons | Ounces |
|---|---|
| 2 | 0.9 |
| 4 | 1.9 |
| 5 | 2.5 |
| 8 | 3.8 |
| 11 | 5.1 |
| 12 | 5.7 |
| 16 | 7.7 |
| 24 | 11.5 |
| 32 | 15.3 |
How to Measure Your Ingredients Size
For dry ingredients, spoon the ingredient into the measuring cup and level off with a straight edge — never scoop directly from the bag, as this packs the ingredient and adds up to 20% extra weight. For liquids, use a liquid measuring cup (with a pour spout) and read at eye level on a flat surface. A digital kitchen scale is the most accurate option and eliminates the need for volume conversions altogether.
Tips for Converting Vegetable Oil Cooking Sizes
Weight-based measurements (grams, ounces) are more accurate than volume measurements (cups, tablespoons) for baking. Professional bakers almost always weigh ingredients.
Humidity, packing density, and grain size all affect how much of a dry ingredient fits in a cup. Two people measuring '1 cup of flour' can end up with weights differing by 30 grams.
When a recipe gives both weight and volume, always prefer the weight measurement — it is what the recipe developer used.
Quick Reference
Quick reference: tablespoons 2 of vegetable oil = ounces 0.9, tablespoons 11 = ounces 5.1, and tablespoons 32 = ounces 15.3. For the complete 9-row conversion table, see the chart above.
This vegetable oil data is also available in Cups, Millilitres sizing. Use the converter tool above to switch between any pair of systems instantly.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How do I convert vegetable oil from tablespoons to ounces?
- Use our vegetable oil conversion chart above. For example, tablespoons 11 of vegetable oil equals ounces 5.1. The chart covers 9 measurements so you can find the exact conversion you need.
- Does vegetable oil weigh the same as other ingredients per cup?
- No. Each ingredient has a different density, so 1 cup of vegetable oil weighs a different amount than 1 cup of flour, sugar, or any other ingredient. That is why ingredient-specific conversion charts like this one exist — using a generic converter will give inaccurate results.
- Should I measure vegetable oil by weight or volume?
- Weight (grams or ounces) is more accurate for baking because volume measurements like cups can vary by up to 20% depending on how the ingredient is scooped and packed. If your recipe gives both, always prefer the weight measurement. A digital kitchen scale is the most reliable tool.
- What is the smallest vegetable oil conversion in this chart?
- The smallest measurement in our chart is tablespoons 2 of vegetable oil, which equals ounces 0.9.
- What is the largest vegetable oil conversion available?
- The largest measurement covered is tablespoons 32 of vegetable oil, which converts to ounces 15.3. If you need a larger quantity, multiply the appropriate row from our chart.
- How do I measure vegetable oil accurately for baking?
- For cups, use the spoon-and-level method: spoon vegetable oil into the measuring cup, then sweep a straight edge across the top to level it off. Never scoop directly from the container — this packs the ingredient and gives you more than the recipe intended. For grams or ounces, use a digital scale set to zero (tared) with your bowl on it.
- Can I use this chart for vegetable oil in savoury recipes too?
- Yes. The weight-to-volume ratio of vegetable oil is the same regardless of whether you are baking or cooking a savoury dish. These conversions apply to any recipe that calls for vegetable oil.