Fidamen

Convert PSI to Bar – Pressure Converter

This converter converts a single numeric pressure value from pounds per square inch (psi) to bar. It is intended for engineering, maintenance, and general-purpose use where a direct, fixed mathematical relationship applies.

Use the result as a unit-conversion reference. For critical measurements (safety systems, legal metrology, high-precision instrumentation) follow instrument calibration procedures and applicable standards before acting on converted values.

Updated Nov 3, 2025QA PASS — golden 25 / edge 120Run golden-edge-2026-01-23

Governance

Record f1da40d0a034 • Reviewed by Fidamen Standards Committee

Interactive Converter

Convert between psi (pounds per square inch) and bar with precision rounding.

Quick reference table

PSI (Pounds per Square Inch)Bar
PSI 1.00 psiBAR 0.0689 bar
PSI 5.00 psiBAR 0.3447 bar
PSI 10.00 psiBAR 0.6895 bar
PSI 25.00 psiBAR 1.7237 bar
PSI 50.00 psiBAR 3.4474 bar
PSI 100.00 psiBAR 6.8948 bar

Methodology

The conversion uses the exact defined relationship between the two units as established by international metrology references. One bar is defined relative to pascals and the pascal is the SI derived unit for pressure. The tool applies that fixed mathematical factor to transform psi to bar.

When converting gauge readings (psig) versus absolute readings (psia), the converter changes only units; it does not add or subtract atmospheric pressure. For applications requiring absolute pressure, first ensure the input is in absolute units or convert gauge to absolute by adding the local atmospheric pressure.

Recommended practice: for regulatory or safety-critical work, consult calibration records and standards (for example NIST guidance on units and calibration, ISO standards on quantities and units, and applicable industry safety standards). Round results consistent with measurement uncertainty and the precision of your instrument.

Key takeaways

This converter applies the fixed, internationally recognized relationship between psi and bar. Use it for quick unit conversions but rely on calibrated instruments and standards guidance for safety-critical, regulatory, or high-precision work.

When converting between gauge and absolute pressures, account for atmospheric pressure outside the unit conversion step. Follow NIST, ISO, and relevant regulatory guidance for traceability and compliance.

Worked examples

14.5037737735 psi → 1.0000000000 bar (reference equivalence)

30 psi × 0.0689475729 = 2.068427187 bar (typical tire-pressure conversion; round to 2.07 bar for display)

0.5 psi × 0.0689475729 = 0.03447378645 bar (useful for low-pressure differentials)

F.A.Q.

Does this converter handle gauge (psig) and absolute (psia) pressure differences?

This tool converts numeric values between units only. It does not add or remove atmospheric pressure. If you have a gauge reading (psig) and need absolute pressure (psia), add local atmospheric pressure (approximately 14.7 psi at sea level) before converting. For accurate absolute conversions use measured local barometric pressure and account for elevation.

How many decimal places should I use?

Choose rounding consistent with the measurement uncertainty of your pressure instrument. For general-purpose conversions 2 decimal places is common; for laboratory or calibration work use 3 or more decimals. Always document rounding when results inform safety or compliance decisions.

Where does the conversion factor come from and how accurate is it?

The conversion factor is derived from the exact SI definitions and internationally recognized relationships between pascals, bars, and pounds per square inch. For traceable measurements, follow calibration and uncertainty statements from standards bodies such as NIST and ISO.

Are there regulatory limits expressed in bar or psi I should be aware of?

Regulatory limits depend on jurisdiction and application (pressure vessels, pipelines, workplace safety). Refer to applicable regulations and standards (for example OSHA rules for pressure-related hazards and industry-specific codes). Use certified calculations and calibrated instruments for compliance checks.

Can I use this for very high or very low pressures?

Mathematically yes—the conversion relationship is linear. Practically, for extreme pressures consider instrument range, nonideal behavior, and whether specialized units or correction factors apply. For critical or high-precision measurements consult appropriate standards and instrumentation specifications.

Sources & citations

Further resources

Versioning & Change Control

Audit record (versions, QA runs, reviewer sign-off, and evidence).

Record ID: f1da40d0a034

What changed (latest)

v1.0.02025-11-03MINOR

Initial publication and governance baseline.

Why: Published with reviewed formulas, unit definitions, and UX controls.

Public QA status

PASS — golden 25 + edge 120

Last run: 2026-01-23 • Run: golden-edge-2026-01-23

Engine

v1.0.0

Data

Baseline (no external datasets)

Content

v1.0.0

UI

v1.0.0

Governance

Last updated: Nov 3, 2025

Reviewed by: Fidamen Standards Committee (Review board)

Credentials: Internal QA

Risk level: low

Reviewer profile (entity)

Fidamen Standards Committee

Review board

Internal QA

Entity ID: https://fidamen.com/reviewers/fidamen-standards-committee#person

Semantic versioning

  • MAJOR: Calculation outputs can change for the same inputs (formula, rounding policy, assumptions).
  • MINOR: New features or fields that do not change existing outputs for the same inputs.
  • PATCH: Bug fixes, copy edits, or accessibility changes that do not change intended outputs except for previously incorrect cases.

Review protocol

  • Verify formulas and unit definitions against primary standards or datasets.
  • Run golden-case regression suite and edge-case suite.
  • Record reviewer sign-off with credentials and scope.
  • Document assumptions, limitations, and jurisdiction applicability.

Assumptions & limitations

  • Uses exact unit definitions from the Fidamen conversion library.
  • Internal calculations use double precision; display rounding follows the unit's configured decimal places.
  • Not a substitute for calibrated instruments in regulated contexts.
  • Jurisdiction-specific rules may require official guidance.

Change log

v1.0.02025-11-03MINOR

Initial publication and governance baseline.

Why: Published with reviewed formulas, unit definitions, and UX controls.

Areas: engine, content, ui • Reviewer: Fidamen Standards Committee • Entry ID: edf3f2fcf04f