Bar to PSI

1 bar = 14.503773773 psi.

Pounds per square inch (psi)
Example:

Formula

psi = bar × 14.503773773.

Quick reference table

Bar (bar)Pounds per square inch (psi)
114.503774
572.518869
10145.037738
1001450.377377

Values rounded for readability. Calculations use full precision.

Recent conversions

Stored locally in your browser.

FAQ

Are your constants exact?

Yes. Based on SI relation.

How do you round?

We display up to 4 decimals for mid-range numbers and more for small values.

Practical Use Cases

Step-by-Step Derivation

If a base relation gives 1 psi in terms of bar, multiply your bar value by that constant to get psi. Alternatively, if 1 bar equals a fixed amount of psi, multiply by that instead.

  1. Identify the base relation on this page (exact when available).
  2. Multiply your Bar (bar) by that constant.
  3. Round the Pounds per square inch (psi) for readability if needed.

Inverse Check (Quick Validity Test)

Take your psi result and convert it back to bar. If you land near your original input (within rounding), the calculation is consistent.

Common Mistakes

Extended Quick Table Tips

Here are handy anchors you can sanity-check:
1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100 bar to psi. Use them as mental checkpoints.

Advanced & Edge Use Cases

Updated October 08, 2025

Worked Numeric Examples

Below are illustrative examples using the page’s formula. Your calculator above performs the precise math:

Bar (bar)Pounds per square inch (psi)
3535.0
1616.0
1111.0

Values shown are rounded; the tool computes with full precision.

Glossary & Search Tips

Accessibility Notes

Applying Pressure Conversions Safely

Pressure conversions matter most when safety or equipment performance is involved: tires, compressors, tools, and some lab gear.

Accurate pressure conversions are part of using equipment responsibly, not just getting numbers right.

Pressure Conversions in Everyday Maintenance

Consistent pressure readings extend equipment life and keep usage safer.

Getting a Feel for Pressure Values

Over time, your memory for pressure numbers becomes another part of your maintenance toolkit.

Keeping Everyone on the Same Page With Pressure

A shared understanding of pressures prevents both underuse and overuse of equipment.

Pressure Checks Before You Change Settings

A careful approach to pressure adjustments protects equipment and keeps usage safe.

Recording Pressure Norms in One Place

A single, up-to-date list prevents conflicting notes from building up over time.