progesterone converter

Progesterone Unit Converter

Convert between SI and conventional units. Enter any value in any field — all others update instantly.

SI UNITS (recommended)
CONVENTIONAL UNITS
nmol/L
pmol/L
ng/mL
ng/dL
ng/100mL
ng%
ng/L
µg/L

* The SI units is the recommended method of reporting clinical laboratory results

Convert nmol/L, ng/mL, ng/dL, pmol/L and More

Getting a progesterone result back from a lab and having no idea what the number means is frustrating. You search online for reference ranges, and the numbers are in completely different units than your report. Or your doctor mentions a threshold in ng/mL, but your result is in nmol/L. This happens constantly — and it wastes time and causes unnecessary anxiety.

This progesterone unit converter fixes that in seconds. Enter your value in any unit, and every other unit updates instantly. No formulas to memorize, no math to do manually.


What Is Progesterone and Why Is It Measured?

Progesterone is a steroid hormone produced primarily in the corpus luteum after ovulation, and in large quantities by the placenta during pregnancy. Its chemical name is pregn-4-ene-3,20-dione and its molecular weight is 314.46 g/mol — the number that makes all unit conversions possible.

In women, progesterone plays a central role in the menstrual cycle. After an egg is released, progesterone prepares the uterine lining for a potential pregnancy. If fertilization does not occur, progesterone levels drop, triggering menstruation. If pregnancy does occur, progesterone rises sharply and remains elevated throughout, supporting the growing fetus and preventing further ovulation.

In men, progesterone is present in much smaller amounts. It serves as a precursor to other hormones including testosterone and cortisol, and plays a supporting role in sperm function and fertility.

Clinicians measure progesterone for many reasons. Confirming ovulation is one of the most common — a mid-luteal phase progesterone level above a certain threshold confirms that ovulation occurred. Tracking early pregnancy viability is another, since low or falling progesterone in early pregnancy is associated with miscarriage risk. Progesterone is also measured when evaluating fertility, investigating irregular menstrual cycles, monitoring progesterone supplementation therapy, and assessing adrenal function.


Why Do Different Units Exist?

The core reason is historical. Clinical laboratories in different countries adopted different measurement conventions, and those conventions became embedded in medical practice, laboratory software, and published reference ranges.

The SI system — Système International — uses molar concentration. It counts how many molecules of a substance are present per litre of solution. For progesterone, that gives you nmol/L (nanomoles per litre) or pmol/L (picomoles per litre). These are the recommended units globally, endorsed by international clinical chemistry bodies.

Conventional units, more commonly used in the United States, express mass concentration — how many nanograms (or picograms) of the substance are dissolved in a given volume. This gives units like ng/mL, ng/dL, and ng/L.

Neither system is wrong. They are just different languages describing the same measurement. Converting between them requires knowing the molecular weight of the substance — for progesterone, that is 314.46 g/mol.


Units This Converter Handles

nmol/L — Nanomoles per litre. The primary SI unit for progesterone. Used in the UK, Europe, Canada, Australia, and recommended internationally. Most academic literature now reports in nmol/L.

pmol/L — Picomoles per litre. One nmol/L equals exactly 1000 pmol/L. Some laboratories report in pmol/L, particularly for lower-concentration measurements.

ng/mL — Nanograms per millilitre. The most widely used conventional unit in the United States. Most US reference ranges are published in ng/mL. Numerically identical to µg/L.

ng/dL — Nanograms per decilitre. One decilitre is 100 millilitres, so ng/dL values are 100 times larger than ng/mL for the same concentration. Common in older US reference tables.

ng/100mL — Nanograms per 100 millilitres. Numerically identical to ng/dL. Some older laboratory reports and printed reference ranges use this notation.

ng% — Nanograms percent. Also numerically identical to ng/dL and ng/100mL. The "%" refers to per 100 mL, not a conventional percentage. You will encounter this in older literature.

ng/L — Nanograms per litre. Since a litre is 1000 millilitres, ng/L values are 1000 times larger than ng/mL. Some research publications and European laboratories use this unit.

µg/L — Micrograms per litre. Numerically identical to ng/mL, because 1 µg/L = 1 ng/mL. Occasionally seen in laboratory reports as an alternative notation.


How to Convert Progesterone Units

The formula is straightforward once you understand the relationship between molar and mass units.

From nmol/L to ng/mL:

ng/mL = nmol/L × 0.3146

From ng/mL to nmol/L:

nmol/L = ng/mL ÷ 0.3146

From nmol/L to pmol/L:

pmol/L = nmol/L × 1000

All other conversions flow from these three relationships. The converter on this page handles all of them automatically — you just type your value and read the result.


Progesterone Conversion Table

Use this table to quickly look up common values. All rows show the same progesterone level expressed in each unit.

nmol/L pmol/L ng/mL ng/dL ng/100mL ng% ng/L µg/L
0.5 500 0.1573 15.73 15.73 15.73 157.3 0.1573
1 1000 0.3146 31.46 31.46 31.46 314.6 0.3146
2 2000 0.6292 62.92 62.92 62.92 629.2 0.6292
3 3000 0.9438 94.38 94.38 94.38 943.8 0.9438
5 5000 1.573 157.3 157.3 157.3 1573 1.573
10 10000 3.146 314.6 314.6 314.6 3146 3.146
12 12000 3.7735 377.35 377.35 377.35 3773.5 3.7735
15 15000 4.719 471.9 471.9 471.9 4719 4.719
20 20000 6.292 629.2 629.2 629.2 6292 6.292
25 25000 7.865 786.5 786.5 786.5 7865 7.865
30 30000 9.438 943.8 943.8 943.8 9438 9.438
40 40000 12.584 1258.4 1258.4 1258.4 12584 12.584
50 50000 15.73 1573 1573 1573 15730 15.73
60 60000 18.876 1887.6 1887.6 1887.6 18876 18.876
80 80000 25.168 2516.8 2516.8 2516.8 25168 25.168
100 100000 31.46 3146 3146 3146 31460 31.46

Progesterone Reference Ranges

Reference ranges vary between laboratories, assay methods, and populations. Always use the ranges your laboratory provides. The values below are general guides from published clinical sources.

In women:

Phase nmol/L ng/mL
Follicular phase 0.6 – 2.9 0.2 – 0.9
Ovulation 2.9 – 9.4 0.9 – 3.0
Luteal phase 5.7 – 79.5 1.8 – 25.0
Postmenopause < 0.6 < 0.2
First trimester 35.6 – 286.2 11.2 – 90.0
Second trimester 101.7 – 607.6 32.0 – 191.0
Third trimester 214.4 – 781.1 67.5 – 245.7

In men: 0.3 – 2.5 nmol/L (0.1 – 0.8 ng/mL)

A luteal phase progesterone level above 16–32 nmol/L (5–10 ng/mL, depending on the laboratory) is generally considered evidence of ovulation. Levels below this threshold in the expected luteal window may suggest anovulatory cycles and warrant further investigation.


Quick Tips for Interpreting Your Result

Timing matters enormously. Progesterone rises sharply after ovulation and falls just before menstruation. A result of 2 nmol/L in the follicular phase is normal. The same result in the mid-luteal phase would suggest the cycle was anovulatory. Always note which cycle day your blood was drawn.

A single result is rarely enough. Because progesterone is secreted in pulses and follows a diurnal rhythm, a single measurement can be misleading. Serial measurements — taken across a cycle or in early pregnancy — give a much clearer picture.

Method matters. Different assay technologies produce different absolute values, even in the same unit. Immunoassay results and mass spectrometry results for the same sample are not always directly comparable. Your lab's own reference ranges are calibrated to their specific method.

Unit confusion is common. A progesterone of 20 ng/mL and 20 nmol/L are entirely different values — the ng/mL value corresponds to roughly 63.6 nmol/L. If a result seems unexpectedly high or low, check which unit was used before drawing any conclusions. That is exactly what this converter is for.

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