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Clothing Sizes Converter

Convert clothing sizes between US, UK, EU, and Asian systems

Clothing size conversions are critical for online shopping, especially from international retailers. The US, UK, Europe, and Asian countries all use different sizing conventions, and even within a system, sizes can vary between brands. A US size Small might correspond to a UK size 8–10, a European size 36–38, or a Chinese size M or L depending on the brand's sizing chart. MegaCalc provides standardized clothing size conversions for tops, bottoms, and dresses across major sizing systems to help you find the right fit when shopping internationally.

Clothing Sizes Tool

Clothing Size Converter

Full Women's Tops & Dresses Chart

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XS634383465
S836403687
M10384238109
L124044401211
XL144246421413
2XL164448441615
3XL184650461817
4XL204852482019

About Clothing Sizes Units

US and Canadian clothing sizes use letter-based sizing (XS, S, M, L, XL) or numeric sizes (for pants and dresses). UK sizes use a numeric system where women's sizes typically run 2–4 numbers higher than equivalent US sizes. European sizes use a completely different numeric scale — a US women's size 8 is approximately a European size 38. Asian sizing (particularly Chinese and Korean) tends to run smaller than Western sizes. Always consult the retailer's specific size chart when possible, as sizing is not fully standardized across brands.

History of Clothing Sizes Measurement

The development of clothing sizes measurement reflects humanity's evolving needs for precision and international consistency. Early measurement systems were tied to physical artifacts, human body parts, or regional conventions, which led to a profusion of units across different cultures and industries. The metric system introduced in late 18th-century France laid the foundation for international standardization, and the formal adoption of the International System of Units (SI) in 1960 provided the modern framework for scientific and commercial measurement. Today's clothing sizes units trace their definitions to fundamental physical constants, ensuring consistency across laboratories, industries, and international trade.

Practical Tips for Clothing Sizes Conversions

When working with clothing sizes conversions, settle on a single unit system at the start of a project and convert all input data to that system before performing calculations. Mid-project unit changes are a common source of errors. For safety-critical work, verify conversions using two independent methods and cross-check against published references. Keep a record of unit choices and conversion factors in your working notes so others can reproduce your calculations.

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

The most common errors in clothing sizes conversion involve mixing units from different systems without converting first, applying the wrong direction of a conversion factor, or using approximate values where precision is needed. Differences between US and UK customary units cause frequent confusion in international contexts. When converting between significantly different scales, double-check the decimal point placement and the power of ten — off-by-a-factor-of-ten errors are surprisingly common.

Professional Uses

Engineers, scientists, technicians, and tradespeople use clothing sizes conversions daily to reconcile data from different sources, compare products and specifications across international markets, and verify that calculations are dimensionally consistent. Academic researchers rely on precise unit conversions when building on work from other institutions or countries. Regulatory compliance often requires reporting measurements in specific units, making conversion an essential routine step.

All Clothing Sizes Conversions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do US and European clothing sizes compare?

For women's tops and dresses: US size 4 ≈ EU 34, US 6 ≈ EU 36, US 8 ≈ EU 38, US 10 ≈ EU 40, US 12 ≈ EU 42. For men's shirts: US/UK sizes (S, M, L, XL) roughly match EU letter sizes, but numeric EU shirt sizes are collar circumference in centimeters. These are guidelines — sizing varies between brands, so check the brand's specific size chart when available.

Why do clothing sizes vary so much between brands?

Clothing sizes are not standardized across brands — each manufacturer creates their own sizing patterns based on their target customer. 'Vanity sizing' has also shifted sizes over decades, meaning a size 10 today fits larger than a size 10 from 30 years ago. Some brands use body measurements (bust/waist/hip in inches or centimeters) rather than arbitrary numbers, which is more accurate. Always use the brand's size chart and body measurements when possible.

How do I find my EU pants size from a US waist size?

European pants sizes use waist measurement in centimeters. Multiply your US waist size (in inches) by 2.54 to get centimeters. For example, US waist 32 inches × 2.54 = 81.3 cm, so look for EU size 82. European inseam is also in centimeters — multiply US inseam in inches by 2.54.