Convert Blueberry from Kilograms to Cups (chopped)

Blueberry converter

Use the tool below to convert blueberry from Kilograms to Cups (chopped).

A large blueberry weighs more than three times a small one, so a cup of blueberries can be well over a hundred small berries or far fewer large ones. Pick the right size below to keep muffins, pancakes, and compote on target.

How many cups is a kg of blueberries?

A kg of blueberries is about 6.45 cups. Half that is about 3.23 cups and double about 12.9 cups, so the ratio scales in a straight line. Use the converter above for any amount, or the chart below for the most common quantities.

Baking with strawberries instead? The strawberry converter works out whole-berry counts and sliced cups across small, medium, and large sizes. See our Strawberry converter.

Need grapes by the cup? The grapes converter handles whole-grape counts and cups across small, medium, and large sizes. See our Grapes converter.

No scale? The tool below gives a good estimate, but for exact bakes a digital kitchen scale removes the guesswork.

Enter an amount, pick your units, and set the size for counting whole blueberries.

Size applies to whole blueberries (small / medium / large).

Result

6.45 cups

Common Blueberry conversions

Quick reference for blueberry at medium size. Switch the size in the converter above for small or large.

KilogramsCups (chopped)
0.25 kg1.61 cups
0.5 kg3.23 cups
1 kg6.45 cups
2 kg12.9 cups
3 kg19.35 cups

Blueberry conversion chart

The chart below shows how whole blueberries (medium size) convert to cups, grams and ounces.

kgcupsblueberriescups (US)gozlb
0.25 kg1.61 cups166.67 blueberries1.68 cups (US)250 g8.82 oz0.55 lb
0.5 kg3.23 cups333.33 blueberries3.36 cups (US)500 g17.64 oz1.1 lb
1 kg6.45 cups666.67 blueberries6.71 cups (US)1000 g35.27 oz2.2 lb
2 kg12.9 cups1333.33 blueberries13.42 cups (US)2000 g70.55 oz4.41 lb
3 kg19.35 cups2000 blueberries20.13 cups (US)3000 g105.82 oz6.61 lb

Blueberry varieties and best uses

The conversions above are the same whatever variety you use; the difference is what each is good for. Here is how the common blueberry varieties compare.

VarietyBest for
HighbushMuffins, pancakes, and fresh eating: large and sweet, the standard cultivated berry.
Lowbush (Wild)Jam and compote: tiny and intensely flavoured, often sold frozen.
RabbiteyeBaking and preserves: firm, late-season southern berry with a thicker skin.

Which should I pick?

For muffins, pancakes, and fresh eating, Highbush is the large, sweet supermarket default and the easiest to find. No Highbush? Rabbiteye is a firm, late-season southern type that bakes well. Reach for Lowbush (Wild) when you want tiny, intense berries for jam and compote, where their concentrated flavour shines.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many cups is a kg of blueberries?
A kg of blueberries is about 6.45 cups of blueberry. The density of chopped blueberry is fixed, so the ratio holds at any amount: double the kg and you double the cups. Use the converter above for any quantity, or the chart below for the most common amounts. Open the blueberry converter
How many kg of blueberries is 6.45 cups?
6.45 cups of blueberries is about 1 kg. The conversion works the same in reverse, so you can switch between kg and cups without changing the result. This helps when a recipe lists one unit but you would rather measure the other. Use the converter above for any amount.
Which blueberry variety should I use?
For muffins, pancakes, and fresh eating, Highbush is the large, sweet supermarket default and the easiest to find. No Highbush? Rabbiteye is a firm, late-season southern type that bakes well. Reach for Lowbush (Wild) when you want tiny, intense berries for jam and compote, where their concentrated flavour shines.

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