How Accurate Are Online Unit Converters? (And When You Shouldn't Trust Them)

Where online converters get their data, what can go wrong, and a practical checklist for knowing when to trust the result and when to verify with the source.

Practical 7 min read Last updated: June 2026
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Where do conversion factors come from?

A converter that uses these sources will give you the same answer as any other converter that uses the same sources — to within the limits of floating-point arithmetic and rounding.

The hidden limitation: floating-point arithmetic

Computers represent numbers in binary, and not all decimal numbers can be represented exactly. 0.1 in binary is a repeating fraction, the same way 1/3 is in decimal. This causes tiny rounding errors that can accumulate.

For most everyday conversions, this is irrelevant — the error is around 10⁻¹⁵, far smaller than the precision you need. But for extreme cases (multiplying thousands of values, working at the limits of measurement precision), it can matter. UnitSwiftPro uses 64-bit floating-point, which is more than sufficient for any realistic conversion.

Rounding and significant figures

A converter that shows 12 decimal places is being misleadingly precise. Real-world measurements rarely have more than 3–4 significant figures. If you measure a length as 1.234 m, you don't actually know the length to within 1 µm — your measuring tape is only good to the nearest mm.

A good converter shows you the right number of significant figures. UnitSwiftPro's default is 6 significant figures, which is more than enough for everyday use. You can adjust it up or down depending on your needs.

When the data is just wrong

UnitSwiftPro prioritizes current standard definitions and cites the system used when working with historical or specialized units. When in doubt, the formula is shown so you can verify.

When to verify with the source

For everyday conversions — recipes, school homework, casual estimates — any reputable online converter is more than accurate enough. The error is well below 0.001%, and you don't need that precision.

But there are cases where you should not rely on an online converter and should verify with the original source:

A quick accuracy checklist

UnitSwiftPro's accuracy commitment

UnitSwiftPro sources its conversion factors from NIST, BIPM, and ISO standards. Every conversion shows the formula used. We use 64-bit floating-point arithmetic, which provides more precision than any real-world measurement can verify.

For everyday conversions, you can trust the result completely. For medical, legal, or aerospace applications, we provide a clear disclaimer and recommend verification with the original source. Read our about page for more on our editorial standards.

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