Number ⟷ Million
Billion ⟷ Trillion
Cents ⟷ Euros
The same math (÷100) works for dollars, pounds, or any decimal currency.
Lakh ⟷ Crore
The Indian numbering system used across South Asia. 1 lakh = 100,000 · 1 crore = 100 lakh = 10 million.
Convert any number to millions — or switch tabs for billion ⟷ trillion, cents ⟷ euros, and the Indian lakh ⟷ crore system. Type either side and the other updates instantly.
The same math (÷100) works for dollars, pounds, or any decimal currency.
The Indian numbering system used across South Asia. 1 lakh = 100,000 · 1 crore = 100 lakh = 10 million.
The Number to Million Converter turns raw numbers into their value in millions — and back again. Type 5,000,000 on one side and you'll see 5 million on the other. Type 2.5 million and you'll see 2,500,000. Either field updates the other as you type, so you can work in whichever direction feels natural.
Three more tabs handle the other large-number conversions you tend to need around the same time: billion ⟷ trillion, cents ⟷ euros (the same ÷100 math works for dollars or pounds), and lakh ⟷ crore for the Indian numbering system used across South Asia.
It's a quick utility, not a calculator suite — designed for the moment you're reading a financial report, parsing a news headline, or filling out a form and just need the number in a different shape.
| Conversion | Math | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Number → Million | ÷ 1,000,000 | 5,000,000 = 5 M · 2,500,000 = 2.5 M |
| Billion → Trillion | ÷ 1,000 | 1,500 B = 1.5 T |
| Cents → Euros | ÷ 100 | 250 ¢ = €2.50 |
| Lakh → Crore | ÷ 100 | 50 Lakh = 0.5 Crore (=5 M) |
Pick the conversion
Use the tabs at the top to switch between Number/Million, Billion/Trillion, Cents/Euros, and Lakh/Crore.
Type in either box
The other side updates as you type — you can work in either direction.
Read the full result
The green panel shows the complete equation — useful for pasting into a report or message.
Copy or clear
Copy the full result line to your clipboard, or clear and try a different value.
Number ↔ Million. Reading "annual revenue of $42M" and wondering how many zeros that actually is. Writing a report where six-zero numbers would look ridiculous and you want to express them cleanly. Estimating population, budget, or audience figures.
Billion ↔ Trillion. Comparing tech-company valuations, national GDPs, or government budgets — the kinds of numbers where the difference between billion and trillion is a thousand times, not a typo.
Cents ↔ Euros. Receipt totals, item pricing, or any time you're working with a system that stores money as integer cents (a lot of payment APIs do). The same ÷100 math applies to dollars, pounds, and most other decimal currencies — pennies, centimes, centavos all work the same way.
Lakh ↔ Crore. The South Asian numbering system used across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. 1 lakh = 100,000 (one hundred thousand) · 1 crore = 100 lakh = 10 million. Indispensable for reading South Asian financial news, real-estate listings, salary packages, and government figures.