Yarn & Needle Size Converter
Knitting patterns aren’t written to one global standard, and the gap between systems trips up even experienced knitters. A US pattern calls for “size 6” needles; a UK pattern calls for the same physical needle “8”; a European pattern skips both and just says “4mm.” Yarn weight names cause the same confusion — “DK” in the UK is close to “Light Worsted” in the US, and a skein labeled “8-ply” in Australia is roughly equivalent to both.
This converter lines up every system side by side, so you can look at a pattern written anywhere in the world and know exactly what needle to pick
up and what yarn weight to shop for. Select a needle size and see its US, UK and metric equivalents at once, or select a yarn weight to see its
name across regions, its typical wraps-per-inch, and the needle range it’s usually knit on.
Yarn & Needle Converter
US, UK or millimeters — line them all up
Pick what you have (needle size or yarn weight) and see the equivalents across every system used in patterns.
Metric (mm)
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US size
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UK / old size
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US common name
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UK / AU name
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Suggested needle
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| CYC # | Weight name | US | UK / AU | WPI | Needle mm | Needle US |
|---|
Needle and gauge ranges are the industry-standard midpoints. Always check the actual ball band — dye lots and fibers can shift real-world gauge.
Needle sizes: three systems, one needle
There are three parallel numbering systems for knitting needles in circulation:
- US sizing — a number scale (0 through 50) that isn’t proportional to the actual diameter; the gaps between sizes get bigger as needles get
thicker. - UK / old British sizing — a descending scale (the higher the number, the thinner the needle), largely phased out in current UK patterns but
still common in vintage patterns and some European ones. - Metric (mm) — the actual diameter of the needle. This is the only system that’s consistent worldwide and the one to trust if a pattern
gives it.
If a pattern only lists one system and your needles are only labeled in another, this table gets you the exact match — not an approximation.
Yarn weights: same yarn, different names
Yarn weight categories aren’t standardized by law, just by convention, so naming varies by region:
- US uses descriptive names — Lace, Fingering, Sport, DK, Worsted, Aran, Bulky, Super Bulky, Jumbo — corresponding to the Craft Yarn
Council’s numbered categories (0–7). - UK / Australia / NZ often uses “-ply” naming (4-ply, 8-ply, 10-ply), a holdover from when yarn was literally described by the number of
plies twisted together — though modern “4-ply” doesn’t always have exactly four plies.
Wraps per inch (WPI) is the most reliable way to identify an unlabeled or hand-spun yarn’s weight: wrap it snugly around a ruler for one inch and
count the wraps. Match that count against the table to find its closest standard weight category and recommended needle size.
A note on accuracy
These are standard industry ranges, cross-checked against Craft Yarn Council conventions. Ball bands vary by brand — a specific yarn’s actual
recommended needle size, printed on the label, should always take priority over the general chart if the two disagree.
FAQ:
Q: My needle is labeled with a size I can’t find on the chart — what do I do?
Measure the needle’s diameter with a ruler or caliper in millimeters and match it to the closest mm value in the table — metric is the only
universal system.
Q: Is UK 8 the same as US 8?
No — this is one of the most common mix-ups. UK 8 is a US 6 (4mm). The two numbering systems run in different directions, so matching numbers is a
coincidence, not equivalence.
Q: What’s the difference between DK and Worsted?
DK (“double knitting”) is one category lighter than Worsted — DK typically knits at 11–15 stitches per 4 inches on 3.75–4.5mm needles, while Worsted
knits at 9–12 stitches per 4 inches on 4.5–5.5mm needles. They’re close but not interchangeable without adjusting your gauge.
Q: How accurate is wraps-per-inch (WPI) for identifying yarn weight?
It’s the standard method for unlabeled or hand-spun yarn, but it’s an approximation — a yarn’s actual gauge also depends on fiber content, twist,
and how tightly you wrap it. Use it as a starting point, then confirm with a gauge swatch.