Kilojoules to Kilocalories (kJ to kcal)
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Kilojoules-to-kilocalories conversions translate SI-canonical kJ regulatory-primary figures into the universal consumer-facing nutrition-Calorie kcal that appears on food labels, restaurant menus and dietary-tracking apps globally. A 4.184 kJ reference rolls down to exactly 1 kcal; a 2259 kJ Big Mac equivalent rolls down to 540 kcal on the consumer-facing menu; a 10,041 kJ daily-intake reference rolls down to 2400 kcal for dietary-tracking-app summary. The factor is exact (1 kJ = 0.239006 kcal) under the modern thermochemical-calorie definition. The conversion is one of the most-run energy-unit conversions globally because of EU Regulation 1169/2011 dual-display mandate, with the kJ-source on the regulatory-primary side and the kcal-destination on the consumer-recognition side.
How to convert Kilojoules to Kilocalories
Formula
kcal = kJ × 0.239006
To convert kilojoules to kilocalories, multiply the kJ figure by 0.239006 — equivalently, divide by 4.184, the kJ value of one kcal. The factor is exact since the 9th CGPM in 1948 fixed the thermochemical calorie at exactly 4.184 J. For mental math, "kJ ÷ 4.2" overstates by 0.4%, fine for casual conversion; "kJ ÷ 4" understates by 4.4%, useful only for rough approximation. For EU food-labelling consumer-display preparation, EU dietary-tracking-app consumer-target tracking, EU-to-UK restaurant-menu format-conversion, and EU-export to US-domestic sports-nutrition format-conversion, use the full 0.239006 multiplier. The conversion runs at every kJ-regulatory-source to kcal-consumer-destination boundary mandated by EU Regulation 1169/2011 dual-display since December 2014.
Worked examples
Example 1 — 4.184 kJ
Four point one eight four kilojoules — the canonical kJ-equivalent of 1 kcal — converts to exactly 1 kcal. That is the canonical reference equivalence between the SI-canonical kJ and the consumer-facing kcal, with the 4.184 figure exact by the 9th CGPM 1948 definition.
Example 2 — 1506 kJ
One thousand five hundred and six kilojoules — a typical per-100-g cereal energy figure — converts to 1506 × 0.239006 = 360 kcal. That is the consumer-facing display alongside the EU regulatory-primary 1506 kJ on the dual-display Nutrition Facts panel.
Example 3 — 10041 kJ
Ten thousand and forty-one kilojoules — a typical adult daily food-energy intake — converts to 10041 × 0.239006 = 2400 kcal. That is the consumer-target tracking figure on dietary-tracking apps alongside the EU regulatory-primary 10,041 kJ daily-intake reference.
kJ to kcal conversion table
| kJ | kcal |
|---|---|
| 1 kJ | 0.239 kcal |
| 2 kJ | 0.478 kcal |
| 3 kJ | 0.717 kcal |
| 4 kJ | 0.956 kcal |
| 5 kJ | 1.195 kcal |
| 6 kJ | 1.434 kcal |
| 7 kJ | 1.673 kcal |
| 8 kJ | 1.912 kcal |
| 9 kJ | 2.1511 kcal |
| 10 kJ | 2.3901 kcal |
| 15 kJ | 3.5851 kcal |
| 20 kJ | 4.7801 kcal |
| 25 kJ | 5.9752 kcal |
| 30 kJ | 7.1702 kcal |
| 40 kJ | 9.5602 kcal |
| 50 kJ | 11.9503 kcal |
| 75 kJ | 17.9255 kcal |
| 100 kJ | 23.9006 kcal |
| 150 kJ | 35.8509 kcal |
| 200 kJ | 47.8012 kcal |
| 250 kJ | 59.7515 kcal |
| 500 kJ | 119.503 kcal |
| 750 kJ | 179.2545 kcal |
| 1000 kJ | 239.006 kcal |
| 2500 kJ | 597.515 kcal |
| 5000 kJ | 1195.03 kcal |
Common kJ to kcal conversions
- 4.184 kJ=1 kcal
- 100 kJ=23.9006 kcal
- 500 kJ=119.503 kcal
- 1000 kJ=239.006 kcal
- 1506 kJ=359.943 kcal
- 2259 kJ=539.9146 kcal
- 4184 kJ=1000.0011 kcal
- 6276 kJ=1500.0017 kcal
- 8368 kJ=2000.0022 kcal
- 10041 kJ=2399.8592 kcal
What is a Kilojoule?
The kilojoule (kJ) is exactly 1000 joules by SI prefix definition. The relationship is fixed and exact, with the kilo- prefix denoting 1000 of the underlying unit. One kJ equals 1000 N·m of mechanical work, or 1000 W·s of electrical energy, or the heat content equivalent to about 239 calories or 239 cal in the older calorie unit. The recognised SI symbol is "kJ", with lowercase "k" SI prefix and uppercase "J" honouring James Prescott Joule. The kilojoule is the standard everyday-engineering energy unit for the typical kJ-scale energy figures in chemical, mechanical, electrical, and food-energy contexts. Higher-energy ranges use megajoules (MJ, 10⁶ J) for combustion-energy figures and gigajoules (GJ, 10⁹ J) for industrial-scale energy contracts.
The kilojoule emerged with the joule itself, fixed by the SI prefix system that has been in continuous use since the 1875 Metre Convention and the subsequent 11th CGPM in 1960. Where the joule is small enough that everyday-engineering and food-energy figures would land in awkward five-and-six-digit Joule values, the kilojoule provides the more legible everyday-scale unit. The kilojoule became the EU-standard food-energy unit under EU Council Directive 90/496/EEC (the original Nutrition Labelling Directive of 1990) and its successor EU Regulation 1169/2011 (the Food Information to Consumers Regulation, in force since 13 December 2014), which mandate kJ-and-kcal dual-display on every prepacked food sold in the EU. The dual-display reflects the regulatory transition from older kcal-only labelling toward SI-canonical kJ primary, with kcal preserved as the consumer-recognition reference. Outside food labelling the kilojoule is the standard everyday-engineering energy unit for chemical-bond energies (typical C-C single bond at 348 kJ/mol), reaction enthalpies, kinetic-energy figures at the multi-tonne scale, and thermal-balance calculations.
EU food and nutrition labelling: EU Regulation 1169/2011 mandates kJ-and-kcal dual-display on every prepacked food sold in the EU since December 2014, with kJ as the SI-canonical primary and kcal as the consumer-recognition reference. A typical 100 g serving of breakfast cereal lists 1500 kJ alongside 360 kcal; a 2400 kcal daily intake reference equals 10,032 kJ. Chemistry and chemical-engineering: kilojoules are the standard unit for chemical-bond dissociation energies (C-C single bond at 348 kJ/mol, C=C double bond at 614 kJ/mol, C≡C triple bond at 839 kJ/mol), reaction enthalpies on a per-mole basis, and Gibbs-free-energy calculations. CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, Atkins' Physical Chemistry, and similar reference works denominate energy quantities in kJ throughout. Mechanical engineering: kinetic-energy and work calculations at the multi-tonne and high-velocity scale produce kJ figures (a 1500 kg car at 100 km/h has 579 kJ kinetic energy; a 500 kg projectile at 1000 m/s has 250 MJ kinetic energy). Crash-energy management, ballistic-energy analysis and impact-engineering work runs in kJ. Electrical and battery systems: large-capacity battery systems (electric-vehicle traction batteries, grid-scale energy storage) often denominate capacity in MJ or kJ alongside the consumer-facing kWh primary.
What is a Kilocalorie?
The kilocalorie (kcal) is exactly 1000 small calories or 4184 joules by the modern SI-aligned definition. One kilocalorie is the heat required to raise one kilogram of water by one degree Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure — Clément's original 1824 calorie definition. The recognised symbol is "kcal" in modern food-labelling and chemistry-textbook usage, with "Cal" (capital C, sometimes "Calorie") preserved in older US food-labelling and consumer-facing communication. The dual-symbol convention means food packaging may show "kcal" (international and EU) or "Cal" (US legacy) for the same unit. The kilocalorie is not part of the SI but is recognised by NIST and BIPM as a non-SI unit accepted for limited use; EU food-labelling regulations preserve it as the consumer-recognition reference alongside kJ as the SI-canonical primary.
The kilocalorie is the unit Nicolas Clément originally defined as "the calorie" in 1824 — the heat required to raise one kilogram of water by one degree Celsius at standard atmospheric pressure. As the smaller "gram calorie" (1/1000 of Clément's original) emerged in nineteenth-century chemistry literature, the original kilogram-based unit was renamed "kilocalorie" or "large calorie" or "Calorie" (capital C) to distinguish the two. The kilocalorie became the universal nutrition-energy unit through the work of Wilbur Atwater (1844-1907), the American chemist who established the modern food-calorie measurement framework using bomb calorimetry to determine the heat-of-combustion of food samples. Atwater's "Calorie" entered US food-and-nutrition labelling under FDA regulations in the early twentieth century and became the global nutrition-energy convention. The kilocalorie persists in EU food-labelling under EU Regulation 1169/2011 alongside the SI-canonical kJ, with the dual-display kJ-and-kcal mandatory on every prepacked food sold in the EU since December 2014. The kcal is also preserved on US FDA Nutrition Facts panels (where it appears as "Calories" with a capital C), in dietary-tracking applications globally, and in legacy chemistry-textbook reaction-enthalpy and bond-energy tables alongside kJ-based modern primary documentation.
Food and nutrition labelling globally: kilocalories are the universal consumer-facing nutrition-energy unit on food packaging in essentially every country. EU Regulation 1169/2011 mandates kJ-and-kcal dual-display on every prepacked food sold in the EU; US FDA Nutrition Facts panel uses "Calories" (capital C, equivalent to kcal) as the primary food-energy display; UK, Australian, and most international food-labelling preserves kcal alongside kJ. Dietary tracking applications: MyFitnessPal, Cronometer, Lifesum, Lose It! and similar dietary-tracking apps universally use kcal as the consumer-facing daily-intake-tracking unit. Adult daily-intake reference values are typically 2000-2500 kcal/day for women, 2400-3000 kcal/day for men depending on activity level. Sports and fitness: per-workout energy-expenditure tracking on fitness wearables (Apple Watch, Fitbit, Garmin, Whoop) and gym cardio equipment (Concept2 rowers, Peloton bikes, Lifefitness treadmills) denominates the active-energy figure in kcal. A typical 30-minute steady-state cardio session burns 200-400 kcal depending on intensity. Chemistry textbook work: legacy chemistry-textbook reaction-enthalpy and bond-energy tables preserve kcal/mol alongside kJ/mol. The combustion of one mole of glucose releases 673 kcal or 2816 kJ.
Real-world uses for Kilojoules to Kilocalories
EU regulatory-primary kJ figures translated to kcal consumer-facing food-labelling
EU food-labelling under Regulation 1169/2011 produces kJ-primary regulatory-compliance figures from laboratory bomb-calorimetry measurements but translates to kcal for the consumer-recognition reference on the dual-display panel. A 1506 kJ per-100-g cereal rolls down to 360 kcal on the consumer-facing display; a 2259 kJ Big Mac equivalent rolls down to 540 kcal. The conversion runs at every food-product EU-labelling consumer-display preparation step.
EU dietary-tracking-app kJ daily-summary translated to kcal consumer-target tracking
EU dietary-tracking applications (MyFitnessPal EU-jurisdiction, Cronometer, Lifesum, Yazio from Germany, FatSecret EU-jurisdiction) accept kJ-input from EU-formatted food-labels but translate to kcal for the consumer-recognition daily-intake-target tracking and progress-summary panels. A 10,041 kJ daily-intake total rolls down to 2400 kcal on the consumer-target tracking; a 6276 kJ weight-loss-target rolls down to 1500 kcal. The conversion runs at every EU-jurisdiction dietary-tracking food-input to consumer-target step, with the kJ-figure on the regulatory food-input and the kcal-figure on the consumer-facing daily-progress display.
EU-format restaurant-menu kJ regulatory display translated to UK kcal-only Calorie Labelling
Cross-jurisdictional restaurant-menu work between EU-format dual-display kJ-and-kcal and UK Calorie Labelling Regulations 2021 (which mandates kcal-only display on menus in restaurants with 250+ employees) translates EU kJ-figures down to kcal-only for UK-jurisdiction display. A 2259 kJ Big Mac equivalent rolls down to 540 kcal on the UK menu; a 586 kJ Cappuccino rolls down to 140 kcal. The conversion runs at every cross-Atlantic chain-restaurant EU-to-UK menu-format preparation step.
EU-export sports-nutrition kJ regulatory primary translated to kcal US-domestic product labels
EU-export sports-nutrition products (US-headquartered brands like Powerbar, Clif, Quest, Gatorade, KIND) translate EU-receiving-market kJ-primary regulatory-compliance figures back to kcal for the US-domestic product-label format under FDA Nutrition Facts panel "Calories" primary requirements. A 1046 kJ EU-export protein-bar rolls down to 250 kcal on the US-domestic label; a 418.4 kJ EU-export energy-gel rolls down to 100 kcal. The conversion runs at every cross-Atlantic sports-nutrition product-label format-conversion step, with the kJ-figure on the EU regulatory-primary and the kcal-figure on the US-domestic FDA-format primary.
When to use Kilocalories instead of Kilojoules
Use kilocalories whenever the destination is consumer-facing food-energy display, dietary-tracking-app consumer-target tracking, casual menu calorie-display, US FDA Nutrition Facts panel "Calories" primary, UK Calorie Labelling Regulations menu-display, or any document where the consumer-recognition kcal convention is the natural unit. Kilocalories are the universal consumer-recognition food-energy unit globally across food labelling, dietary-tracking apps, restaurant-menu calorie-displays and sports-nutrition product packaging. Stay in kilojoules when the destination is an EU food-labelling regulatory-primary, EU dietary-tracking-app daily-summary panel, EU-jurisdiction restaurant-menu dual-display, EU-export sports-nutrition regulatory documentation, or any document where SI-canonical kJ is the regulatory-mandatory primary unit. The conversion is at the kJ-regulatory-source to kcal-consumer-destination boundary, mandated under EU Regulation 1169/2011 dual-display requirements.
Common mistakes converting kJ to kcal
- Confusing the destination unit kcal (nutrition Calorie, 4.184 kJ) with the destination unit cal (chemistry small calorie, 0.004184 kJ). A "1500 kJ" figure rolls down to 358 kcal (nutrition) or 358,500 cal (chemistry) — the two destinations differ by 1000-fold. Use the right factor for the right destination unit.
- Using "kJ ÷ 4" as adequate precision for EU regulatory-compliance kcal conversion. The 4.4% rounding error fails the precision required for EU Regulation 1169/2011 audit; a 1500 kJ item would label as 375 kcal on the rounded shortcut versus the precise 358.5 kcal. The full 0.239006 multiplier is required.
Frequently asked questions
How many kcal in 1 kJ?
One kilojoule equals 0.239006 kilocalories — equivalently, 1 kJ ÷ 4.184 = 0.239 kcal. The factor is exact since the 9th CGPM in 1948 fixed the thermochemical calorie at exactly 4.184 J, with kcal as 1000 cal giving the kJ-to-kcal factor. The "1 kJ ≈ 0.24 kcal" rounded reference is the canonical EU dual-display reverse-conversion.
How many kcal in 1506 kJ (a per-100-g cereal)?
One thousand five hundred and six kilojoules equals 1506 × 0.239006 = 360 kcal. That is the consumer-facing display on the EU dual-display Nutrition Facts panel alongside the 1506 kJ regulatory-primary, mandatory under EU Regulation 1169/2011 since December 2014. The conversion is exact and unambiguous.
How many kcal in 2400 kcal-daily-equivalent kJ?
A 2400 kcal daily-intake reference equals 10,041 kJ — the conversion is from the consumer-facing kcal back to the SI-canonical kJ regulatory primary. Going the other direction, 10,041 kJ rolls down to 2400 kcal on the consumer-target tracking. The two figures appear together on EU dietary-tracking-app daily-summary panels.
Quick way to convert kJ to kcal in my head?
Divide the kJ figure by 4.2 — the precision is to about 0.4%, fine for casual conversation. For 1506 kJ the shortcut gives 359 kcal versus the precise 360 kcal. The cruder "÷ 4" shortcut understates by 4.4%. For EU regulatory-compliance work use the full 0.239006 multiplier on a calculator.
Why does food labelling show both kJ and kcal?
EU Regulation 1169/2011 mandates kJ-and-kcal dual-display on every prepacked food sold in the EU since December 2014. The kJ is the SI-canonical primary unit favoured by metric-system standardisation; the kcal is the consumer-recognition reference that pre-dates SI adoption. The dual-display preserves consumer-friendly kcal as the recognition reference while transitioning the regulatory primary to SI-canonical kJ.
Is kcal the same as nutritional Calorie?
Yes — one kilocalorie (kcal) equals exactly one nutrition Calorie (Cal, capital C). The two notations refer to the same unit, with "kcal" the modern style preferred in EU food-labelling under Regulation 1169/2011 and "Calorie" preserved on US FDA Nutrition Facts panels. Both equal 4184 J or 4.184 kJ.
How precise should kJ-to-kcal be for EU regulatory work?
For EU regulatory-compliance work the precise 0.239006 multiplier is required because EU Regulation 1169/2011 mandates accurate dual-display kJ-and-kcal on every prepacked food. The "÷ 4" shortcut introduces a 4.4% error that fails regulatory-compliance audit; the full 0.239006 multiplier preserves precision through the consumer-display preparation.