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Butter and Oil ConvertersFree baking calculatorMeasured kitchen ratios

Butter To Canola Oil Conversion

Convert butter to oil or oil to butter for cakes, muffins, quick breads, and brownies with cup, tablespoon, and gram ratios.

Quick answer

To replace butter with oil in baking, use about 3/4 as much oil as butter. For 1 cup butter, use 3/4 cup oil.

Ratio note

The kitchen rule behind this page

Rule used

Use about 3/4 cup oil for every 1 cup butter in pourable batters.

Where it works

Muffins, loaf cakes, snack cakes, brownies, and quick breads.

Where to be careful

Do not use this as a blind swap for pie crust, laminated dough, or cookies built around creamed butter.

Butter to Oil Formula

This works best in cakes, muffins, quick breads, and brownies. It is not ideal for laminated dough, pie crust, or cookies that rely on creamed butter.

Interactive calculator

0.75 cup neutral oil

Best for pourable batters. Reverse estimate: 1.33 cups melted butter for 1 cup oil.

How to use it

Change the amount below and use the result as a kitchen starting point. For cakes and bread, texture still depends on flour, pan depth, and bake time.

InputResultUse
1/4 cup butter3 tbsp oilSmall bakes
1/2 cup butter6 tbsp oilBrownies, muffins
2/3 cup butter1/2 cup oilCake layers
1 cup butter3/4 cup oilLarge cakes

Butter to Oil Conversion

ButterOilBest for
1/4 cup butter3 tbsp oilSmall muffins, snack cakes
1/2 cup butter6 tbsp oilQuick breads, brownies
2/3 cup butter1/2 cup oilLayer cakes
1 cup butter3/4 cup oilLarge cakes

Oil Choice by Flavor

OilFlavorUse it for
CanolaNeutralVanilla cake, muffins
Vegetable oilNeutralBox cake, brownies
Olive oilFruityCitrus cake, chocolate cake
Coconut oilCoconut noteBanana bread, loaf cakes

Practical Notes

  • Use melted butter when converting oil back to butter.
  • Reduce salt slightly if you use salted butter.
  • Oil makes cakes moist but does not cream with sugar, so texture changes in cookies.

Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using oil in pie crust where solid fat is needed for flakes.
  • Replacing butter one-for-one with oil; that usually makes the batter greasy.
  • Using strong olive oil in delicate vanilla recipes.

Where This Helps in Real Baking

Frequently Asked Questions

Sometimes, but cookies spread differently because oil cannot trap air like creamed butter.

Canola or vegetable oil is best when you want neutral flavor. Olive oil works when its flavor fits the recipe.

For home baking, the practical rule is by volume: use 3/4 as much oil as butter.

Related Calculators

Topic cluster

More useful paths in Butter and Oil Converters

This page is part of a baking calculator cluster. Use the main category when you want the broad rule, then move into the narrower pages when the ingredient, pan, or recipe is specific.

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