Gold Weight Units Decoded: Troy Ounces, Grams, Tolas and Taels in Plain English
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Converters
Gold has been measured for centuries, and the world never settled on a single unit. The result is a small zoo of weights that all describe the same metal: grams in most of the world, troy ounces on the trading floor, tolas across South Asia, taels in Chinese-speaking markets, and pennyweights and grains in workshops. Knowing how they relate is the difference between confidently comparing prices and accidentally over- or under-paying. A converter handles the arithmetic, but understanding the units keeps you from feeding it the wrong number.
The anchor unit is the troy ounce, equal to exactly 31.1034768 grams. It comes from the troy weight system tied to the medieval trading town of Troyes in France and was later adopted by the Royal Mint and the U.S. Mint, which cemented it as the global standard for quoting gold, silver and platinum. The key trap is that it is not the ounce on your bathroom or kitchen scale. The everyday avoirdupois ounce is 28.3495 g, so a troy ounce is about 10% heavier. Treating 100 standard ounces as 100 troy ounces would understate the gold by roughly 8 troy ounces.
Inside the troy system the smaller units are tidy. One troy ounce contains exactly 20 pennyweights, and each pennyweight contains 24 grains, giving 480 grains to the ounce. That makes a pennyweight 1.55517384 g and a grain about 0.06480 g. Jewelers reach for pennyweights because they sit comfortably between the very small grain and the relatively large troy ounce, which is handy when pricing rings, chains and other small pieces by weight.
Regional units add the most confusion. The bullion tola is standardized at 180 troy grains, or 11.6638038 g, and is a familiar bar size in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal. The tael is trickier because it is not one weight: the Hong Kong tael is 37.429 g, the Taiwan tael is 37.5 g, the Singapore tael is about 37.7994 g, and a Chinese market tael can be 50 g. Always confirm which tael a seller means before converting, or a single bar can appear to differ by tens of grams.
Put together, converting is straightforward once the units are clear: reduce the source figure to grams using its fixed factor, then express that mass in your target unit. A converter does this instantly, but the discipline is yours. Verify whether an ounce is troy or avoirdupois, note which regional tael applies, and remember that weight is only half of value. Pair the converted weight with the gold's purity and the live price per unit, and only then are you comparing apples to apples.
Quick tips
- Whenever a price says "per ounce," confirm it means troy ounce (ozt) at 31.1035 g, not the 28.3495 g grocery ounce, before you convert or compare.
- For South Asian bars, use the 180-grain bullion tola (11.6638 g); some older or regional tolas differ slightly, so check the source.
- If a seller quotes taels, ask which standard: Hong Kong (37.429 g), Taiwan (37.5 g), Singapore (37.7994 g) or mainland China (50 g).
- Convert weight first, then apply purity and the current spot price separately, since this tool measures mass only and not value.
The Gold Weight Converter is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.