Instantly convert concrete grades between PSI, MPa, ACI designations, Eurocode classes, British BS grades, and mix ratios — with application guidance and 2026 USA standard references.
Concrete compressive strength is expressed differently across global standards — the USA uses PSI (pounds per square inch) per ACI 318 and ASTM C39, while metric countries use MPa (megapascals), the Eurocode uses C-class designations (e.g., C30/37 where 30 is cylinder strength and 37 is cube strength in MPa), and the UK uses BS grade designations. When working on USA projects with international contractors, imported precast elements, or multi-country engineering teams, accurate concrete grade conversion is essential to ensure structural safety and code compliance.
The American Concrete Institute (ACI) uses cylinder test specimens (6″ × 12″) per ASTM C39 as the USA standard — which produces approximately 80% of cube test values used in European and British standards. This means a 30 MPa cylinder strength corresponds to roughly 37–38 MPa cube strength, explaining the two numbers in Eurocode C-class designations like C30/37. Explore concrete volume estimates for your converted grade at the Portland Concrete Calculator.
The USA (ACI/ASTM) tests concrete using cylinders → lower value. Europe and UK test using cubes → higher value (~25% more). When converting from a Eurocode C-class like C30/37, the 30 MPa is the cylinder value (comparable to USA testing) and 37 MPa is the cube value. Always use the cylinder value (first number) when comparing to USA PSI specifications.
The calculator accepts your input in any grade system — PSI, MPa, Eurocode, BS, or traditional mix ratio — and outputs the equivalent values across all systems simultaneously. Conversions are based on exact mathematical relationships and the 2026 ACI 318, ASTM C39, EN 206, and BS 8500 standards.
A common and dangerous mistake on USA projects using international specs is applying the cube MPa value directly into ACI 318 design equations. ACI equations are calibrated for cylinder strength f'c only. Always convert: f'c (cylinder) = cube strength × 0.80 before using any Eurocode or BS grade in ACI-based structural design or concrete grade beam calculations.
This master concrete grade conversion table covers all major USA and international grading systems side by side. All values are based on standard cylinder testing per ASTM C39 for PSI/MPa and equivalent Eurocode and BS designations for the same strength class.
| USA PSI (f'c) | MPa (Cylinder) | Eurocode Class | BS Grade | Mix Ratio (approx) | Typical USA Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2,000 PSI | 13.8 MPa | C12/15 | C15 | 1:3:6 | Lean Mix / Blinding |
| 2,500 PSI | 17.2 MPa | C15/20 | C20 | 1:2.5:5 | Sidewalks / Lightly Loaded |
| 3,000 PSI | 20.7 MPa | C20/25 | C25 | 1:2:4 | Residential Standard |
| 3,500 PSI | 24.1 MPa | C25/30 | C25 | 1:1.75:3.5 | Driveways / Patios |
| 4,000 PSI | 27.6 MPa | C25/30 | C28 | 1:1.5:3 | Commercial / Grade Beams |
| 4,500 PSI | 31.0 MPa | C28/35 | C32 | 1:1.25:2.5 | Heavy Commercial |
| 5,000 PSI | 34.5 MPa | C30/37 | C35 | 1:1:2 | High Strength / Structural |
| 6,000 PSI | 41.4 MPa | C35/45 | C40 | 1:0.75:1.5 | Bridges / Columns |
| 8,000 PSI | 55.2 MPa | C45/55 | C50 | Engineered Mix | High Performance Concrete |
| 10,000 PSI | 68.9 MPa | C55/67 | C60 | Engineered Mix | Ultra High Strength / Precast |
ACI 318-2026 Table 19.3.3 mandates minimum concrete compressive strengths based on the exposure class of the structure. Knowing your required exposure class ensures correct concrete grade selection beyond just structural load requirements — environmental durability is equally critical for USA projects.
| ACI Exposure Class | Min PSI (f'c) | Min MPa | Eurocode Equiv. | Max w/c Ratio | Typical USA Condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F0 — No Freeze | 2,500 PSI | 17.2 MPa | C15/20 | No limit | Interior / Protected |
| F1 — Moderate Freeze | 3,500 PSI | 24.1 MPa | C25/30 | 0.55 | Exposed — Moderate Climate |
| F2 — Severe Freeze | 4,500 PSI | 31.0 MPa | C28/35 | 0.45 | Deicing Salts / N. States |
| S0 — Negligible Sulfate | 2,500 PSI | 17.2 MPa | C15/20 | No limit | Normal Soil Conditions |
| S1 — Moderate Sulfate | 4,000 PSI | 27.6 MPa | C25/30 | 0.50 | TX, WY, CO Sulfate Soils |
| S2 — Severe Sulfate | 4,500 PSI | 31.0 MPa | C28/35 | 0.45 | High Sulfate Soil / Water |
| W2 — Water Tight | 4,000 PSI | 27.6 MPa | C25/30 | 0.50 | Basement Walls / Tanks |
| C2 — High Corrosion | 5,000 PSI | 34.5 MPa | C30/37 | 0.40 | Coastal / Marine Exposure |
The precise conversion factor is 1 MPa = 145.0377 PSI. For quick field calculations, rounding to 145 gives accuracy within 0.03% — acceptable for all practical USA construction estimates. For formal structural design submittals, always use the full factor 145.038 per ASTM standard definitions.
The USA is one of only three countries not officially on the metric system (alongside Myanmar and Liberia). ACI 318 and all major US structural codes specify concrete in PSI (f'c). However, most US engineering software and international project documentation also accepts MPa — making this concrete grade conversion tool essential for modern USA construction.
Concrete cube tests (used in Europe and UK) produce strengths approximately 20–25% higher than cylinder tests on identical concrete. The standard conversion factor used by ACI and most international codes is cylinder = cube × 0.80. This explains the two-number Eurocode format: C30/37 = 30 MPa cylinder strength / 37 MPa cube strength.
Concrete strength is primarily controlled by the water-to-cement (w/c) ratio. Lower w/c ratios produce higher strength: w/c 0.65 ≈ 3,000 PSI; w/c 0.50 ≈ 4,000–4,500 PSI; w/c 0.40 ≈ 5,500–6,000 PSI. ACI 318-2026 sets maximum w/c limits by exposure class — not just minimum strength — to ensure durability alongside structural capacity.
Mix ratios like 1:2:4 refer to cement : fine aggregate (sand) : coarse aggregate (gravel) by weight or volume. The ratio 1:2:4 produces approximately 3,000 PSI (20.7 MPa) at a standard w/c ratio of 0.60. Modern USA specifications use w/c ratio and design strength instead of nominal mix ratios — but ratios remain common for small DIY pours and international communication.
ACI 363 defines High-Strength Concrete (HSC) as concrete with f'c above 6,000 PSI (41.4 MPa). HSC requires engineered mix designs with supplementary cementitious materials (SCM) like silica fume, fly ash, or GGBS — simple mix ratios no longer apply. In the USA, HSC is standard for high-rise columns, bridge girders, and prestressed precast elements.
Use this comprehensive formula reference for manual concrete grade conversion calculations on USA job sites, engineering submittals, or international project documentation — all based on 2026 ACI, ASTM, and EN 206 definitions.
ACI 318-2026 sets absolute minimum concrete strengths: 2,500 PSI (17.2 MPa) for concrete not exposed to weather or soil; 3,000 PSI (20.7 MPa) for concrete exposed to weather; 3,500 PSI (24.1 MPa) for concrete exposed to deicing chemicals; and 4,000–5,000 PSI (27.6–34.5 MPa) for severe sulfate and corrosion exposure conditions across the USA.
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Official USA and international standards for concrete strength testing and grade designations
ACI 318-2026 is the primary USA structural concrete code defining f'c, exposure classes, minimum strength requirements, and w/c ratio limits for all concrete construction across the United States.
Visit ACIASTM C39 defines the standard test method for compressive strength of cylindrical concrete specimens — the basis for all PSI and MPa values used in ACI-based USA structural design and concrete grade specifications.
Visit ASTMEN 206 is the European standard for concrete specification, performance, and conformity — defining C-class grades used in Eurocode structural design. Essential for converting international concrete specifications to USA PSI values.
Visit CEN