Calculator Inputs
Reference Weights Used
These values convert common carton grades into grams per egg. Farms and countries can label sizes differently, so custom weights are also supported.
| Egg size | Ounces per dozen | Grams per egg |
|---|---|---|
| Peewee | 15 oz | 35.44 g |
| Small | 18 oz | 42.52 g |
| Medium | 21 oz | 49.61 g |
| Large | 24 oz | 56.70 g |
| Extra Large | 27 oz | 63.79 g |
| Jumbo | 30 oz | 70.87 g |
Example Data Table
| Input batch | Target size | Batch weight | Equivalent eggs | Equivalent dozens |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 Jumbo eggs | Large | 425.24 g | 7.50 Large eggs | 0.63 dozen |
| 12 Small eggs | Large | 510.29 g | 9.00 Large eggs | 0.75 dozen |
| 2 dozen Medium eggs | Extra Large | 1,190.68 g | 18.67 Extra Large eggs | 1.56 dozen |
| 1,000 grams | Large | 1,000.00 g | 17.64 Large eggs | 1.47 dozen |
| 1.5 pounds Large eggs | Medium | 680.39 g | 13.71 Medium eggs | 1.14 dozen |
Formula Used
Weight per egg = (ounces per dozen × 28.349523125) ÷ 12
Gross batch weight = input quantity converted into grams
Equivalent target eggs = gross batch weight ÷ target grams per egg
Equivalent target dozens = equivalent target eggs ÷ 12
Usable liquid = gross batch weight × edible yield percentage
Cartons needed = equivalent target eggs ÷ eggs per carton
This calculator uses weight-based conversion, which is more reliable than simple egg counts when backyard flocks produce mixed sizes.
How to Use This Calculator
- Choose the source egg size from your flock, carton, or recipe notes.
- Enter the quantity and pick its unit, such as eggs, dozens, grams, or pounds.
- Select the target size you want to match for packing, selling, or baking.
- Use custom weights when your hens lay unusually light or heavy eggs.
- Adjust edible yield to estimate liquid egg volume after shell loss.
- Set carton size and rounding mode to fit retail trays or recipe swaps.
- Press the button to see the result above the form.
- Download the result as CSV or PDF when you need records.
Frequently Asked Questions
1) What does egg size conversion mean?
It means translating one batch of eggs into an equivalent batch of another size using weight. This helps when recipes, carton labels, or flock sorting require consistent egg mass instead of simple counts.
2) Why is weight better than count?
Two eggs may look similar yet weigh differently. Weight-based conversion preserves total egg mass, which gives better results for baking, carton planning, liquid egg estimates, and inventory decisions.
3) Are egg sizes the same everywhere?
No. Size labels differ by country, brand, and local market rules. That is why this page offers standard reference values and custom weights for backyard flocks or regional carton systems.
4) Can I use mixed backyard eggs?
Yes. Weigh the mixed batch in grams, ounces, pounds, or kilograms, then convert that total weight into any target size. This is often the best method for homesteads and small farms.
5) What is edible yield?
Edible yield estimates how much of the egg remains after removing shells. It is useful for liquid egg planning, recipe prep, freezing, and estimating the usable portion of a packed batch.
6) Can this calculator help with carton packing?
Yes. Enter your carton size and the tool estimates total cartons, full cartons, and leftover eggs. That makes retail packing, market prep, and storage planning much easier.
7) Does egg freshness change the conversion?
Freshness changes moisture slowly, but size conversion mainly depends on current weight. If accuracy matters, weigh the eggs or batch first, then use grams or a custom weight input.
8) Which egg size is best for baking swaps?
Large eggs are the most common recipe reference, so many bakers convert everything toward large. Still, this tool lets you match any target size by total weight, which is usually the safest approach.