Prescribed Dose
This is the medication amount your provider prescribed, usually written in milligrams, such as 0.5 mg, 2.5 mg, 7.5 mg, or another dose.
An educational tool to help you understand how prescribed milligram doses, vial concentration, and syringe units relate to each other — with a visual syringe guide that fills to the calculated line.
This calculator is for education only. Always follow the dose and instructions provided by your licensed healthcare provider and medication label.
Enter the medication, vial concentration, prescribed dose, and syringe type. The calculator will estimate the units to draw and show the approximate line on the syringe visual.
units on your 100-unit syringe
This shows approximately where to draw your medication on a standard insulin syringe.
This tool simplifies the relationship between your prescribed dose, the concentration of your vial, and the units shown on a U-100 insulin syringe.
This is the medication amount your provider prescribed, usually written in milligrams, such as 0.5 mg, 2.5 mg, 7.5 mg, or another dose.
This is the concentration listed on the vial, usually shown as mg/mL. Different vials can have different concentrations.
On a U-100 syringe, 100 units equals 1 mL. The calculator estimates how many units match your prescribed dose and vial strength.
Dose-to-units confusion is exactly why clear education matters. When in doubt, pause and ask.
This calculator should never be used to increase, decrease, or modify a prescribed medication dose.
Make sure the concentration selected matches the actual vial label. The same medication can come in different strengths.
If your numbers do not make sense, contact your provider or pharmacy before injecting anything.
A few important things to know before using any dose-to-units calculator.
No. This calculator is only for understanding a dose already prescribed by a licensed healthcare provider. Do not use it to choose, increase, or decrease your dose.
Do not guess. Contact your provider or pharmacy and confirm the exact concentration on your medication label before drawing medication.
Because their vial concentrations may be different. The same milligram dose can require different syringe units depending on how concentrated the medication is.
No. Your provider’s directions and medication label are the source of truth. This calculator is only an educational aid.
We can help with education and clarity, but medication decisions and dosing instructions must come from your licensed healthcare provider.
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