How To Convert Millibar to Bar
Formula for 1 millibar to bar: 1 millibar = 0.001 bar.
Example: Convert 850 millibar to bar.
850 ÷ 1,000 = 0.85 bar.
To do it by hand, you are just changing the scale.
Millibar is smaller than bar, so the number gets smaller when you convert to bar.
Divide by 1,000, or move the decimal point 3 places to the left.
Quick Answer
1 millibar = 0.001 bar
- 100 millibar = 0.1 bar
- 750 millibar = 0.75 bar
- 1013.25 millibar = 1.01325 bar
Conversion Formula
bar = millibar ÷ 1,000
This means you take the pressure value in millibar and divide it by 1,000 to get the same pressure in bar.
It works because 1 bar = 1,000 millibar, so each millibar is one thousandth of a bar.
- Write your value in millibar.
- Divide the value by 1,000.
- The result is the value in bar.
Millibar
A millibar is a unit of pressure equal to 0.001 bar (also equal to 100 pascals).
It became popular in weather reports because typical air pressure values are easy to read in millibar. Its symbol is mbar.
- Weather maps and forecasts (sea level pressure)
- Storm tracking and pressure trends
- Aviation and cabin pressure references (in some contexts)
- Vacuum equipment and pumps (low pressures)
- Lab and industrial pressure readings
Bar
A bar is a unit of pressure equal to 100,000 pascals.
It is widely used in engineering because it is close to normal air pressure and convenient for many systems. Its symbol is bar.
- Tire pressure (many gauges show bar)
- Scuba diving tank pressure
- Hydraulics and pneumatic systems
- Industrial compressors and regulators
- Espresso machines (often around 9 bar)
Is this Conversion of Millibar To Bar Accurate?
Yes. This conversion is exact because the units are defined by a fixed relationship: 1 bar = 1,000 millibar. Our converter uses this standard definition, so the math is reliable for study, engineering, weather work, and everyday use.
Any small difference you may see comes only from rounding how many decimal places are shown, not from the conversion itself. For more details, see our accuracy standards.
Real Life Examples
Millibar is common in weather, while bar is common in engineering. Here are practical conversions you will actually see.
- Standard sea level pressure: 1013.25 millibar = 1.01325 bar. This is a common reference point in meteorology.
- Low pressure storm system: 980 millibar = 0.98 bar. A lower value often links with stormy weather.
- Strong high pressure system: 1035 millibar = 1.035 bar. This often brings calmer, clearer weather.
- Airplane cabin pressure (example): 800 millibar = 0.8 bar. Cabin pressure is lower than sea level during flight.
- Vacuum chamber reading: 50 millibar = 0.05 bar. This is a light vacuum compared to atmospheric pressure.
- Car tire pressure (common range): 2300 millibar = 2.3 bar. Many tire gauges use bar, but some systems may store values in millibar.
- Espresso brewing pressure (classic): 9000 millibar = 9 bar. Espresso machines often target around 9 bar at the pump.
Quick Tips
- To go from millibar to bar, move the decimal 3 places left.
- Remember the anchor point: 1000 millibar = 1 bar.
- Values near normal air pressure will be near 1 bar (about 1000 millibar).
- For fast estimates, drop the last three digits of millibar to get bar (then adjust decimals if needed).
- If you need more precision, keep extra decimals, like 1013.25 millibar = 1.01325 bar.