How To Convert Pascal to Bar
Formula: To convert from Pascal to Bar, divide by 100,000.
Example: 45,000 Pa = 45,000 ÷ 100,000 = 0.45 bar.
You can do this conversion manually with a calculator in a few seconds.
Pascal is a small unit, so the bar value often looks like a decimal.
If your Pa number is large, the bar result becomes a normal sized number.
Quick Answer
1 Pascal (Pa) = 0.00001 Bar (bar)
- 10,000 Pa = 0.1 bar
- 101,325 Pa = 1.01325 bar
- 250,000 Pa = 2.5 bar
Conversion Formula
bar = Pa ÷ 100,000 Pa = bar × 100,000
Here, 100,000 means there are exactly 100,000 pascals in 1 bar. So you divide by 100,000 to change Pa into bar. If you want to go back from bar to Pa, you multiply by 100,000.
- Write down your pressure in Pa.
- Divide the Pa value by 100,000.
- The result is the pressure in bar.
Pascal
A pascal is an SI unit of pressure, equal to one newton of force per square meter. Its symbol is Pa.
It is named after Blaise Pascal, a French scientist who studied fluids and pressure. The pascal became the official SI pressure unit in the 20th century.
- Weather and atmospheric pressure readings (often shown as hPa, which is 100 Pa).
- Engineering pressure calculations and lab measurements.
- Material stress and strength testing (Pa, kPa, MPa).
- Vacuum and low pressure systems.
- Scientific reports that use SI units.
Bar
A bar is a pressure unit commonly used in engineering and everyday equipment. Its symbol is bar.
The bar became popular because it is close to normal atmospheric pressure. It is widely used in Europe and in many industries for practical pressure ranges.
- Tire pressure on cars and bikes (often 2 to 3 bar).
- Air compressors and pneumatic tools.
- Scuba diving tanks and regulators.
- Hydraulic machines and industrial pressure systems.
- Coffee and espresso machine pressure ratings (often around 9 bar).
Is this Conversion of Pascal To Bar Accurate?
Yes. This conversion is exact because 1 bar is defined as exactly 100,000 pascals. Our converter uses this official definition, which is the same value used in engineering references, textbooks, and technical standards, so the results are reliable for study, work, and daily use. For more details about how we follow standard definitions, read our accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
Pascal to bar is common when you read pressure sensors in Pa but your equipment label is in bar.
- Car tire pressure: A sensor reads 220,000 Pa. Convert it, 220,000 ÷ 100,000 = 2.2 bar, which is a normal car tire range.
- Atmospheric pressure: Standard sea level pressure is 101,325 Pa, which equals 1.01325 bar.
- Espresso machine: If a pump creates 900,000 Pa, that is 900,000 ÷ 100,000 = 9 bar, a common espresso target.
- Bike tire: A road bike might be set to 600,000 Pa, which equals 6 bar.
- Scuba tank fill: A tank pressure of 20,000,000 Pa converts to 200 bar, a common full tank value.
- Hydraulic system: A machine line at 15,000,000 Pa is 150 bar, typical for many industrial hydraulics.
- Vacuum chamber: A chamber at 5,000 Pa is 5,000 ÷ 100,000 = 0.05 bar, showing a strong reduction from normal air pressure.
- Weather low pressure: A storm system might be around 98,000 Pa, which equals 0.98 bar.
Quick Tips
- Remember: 1 bar = 100,000 Pa.
- To go Pa to bar, move the decimal 5 places left.
- 10,000 Pa is always 0.1 bar, useful as a quick anchor.
- 100,000 Pa is always 1 bar, another easy anchor.
- If you see kPa, convert to Pa first, 1 kPa = 1,000 Pa.
- If you see MPa, 1 MPa = 1,000,000 Pa = 10 bar.