Hereโs an in-depth look at common cake pan sizes & conversions, as well as how to adjust recipes or make substitutions based on the pan sizes you have. Free printable included.

Unless you have a fully stocked kitchen with dozens of baking pans, chances are that youโll run into a recipe where you donโt have the specific pan required. In fact, a cake pan substitution is the subject of most recipe questions I receive. I figured it would be easier to store all of this information in one convenient place for us all to reference.
Welcome to my Cake Pan Sizes & Conversions lesson!
This Post Includes:
- Common Baking Pan Measurements
- Cake Pans That Are Similar
- Substituting Cake Pans
- Adapting Cake Recipes to Fit Certain Pans
- Amount of Batter Some of My Cake Recipes Yield

Common Baking Pan Measurements
In this list, youโll find common baking pan measurements and the volume of batter they hold. **The amount listed is the total amount of batter each pan holds, but you usually only fill cake pans halfway (unless otherwise noted in the recipe you are using).** Most measurements were taken at my home kitchen. Cross referenced with the always trusted Joy of Baking, as well.
Measurement Conversions
- 1 inch = 2.54cm
- 1 cup = 240ml
Round Pans:
6ร2 inches (15 x 5cm) = 4 cups (960ml)
8ร2 inches (20 x 5cm) = 6 cups (1.4 liters)
9ร2 inches (23 x 5cm) = 8 cups (1.9 liters)
Square Pans:
8ร2 inch square (20 x 5 cm) = 8 cups (1.9 liters)
9ร2 inch square (23 x 5 cm) = 10 cups (2.4 liters)
10ร2 inch square = (25 x 5 cm) = 12 cups (2.8 liters)
Rectangular Pans โ 2 inch (5 cm) tall
11ร7 inches (28 x 18 cm) = 10 cups (2.4 liters)
13ร9 inches (33 x 23 cm) = 14 cups (3.3 liters)
Springform Pans:
9x 2.5 inches (23 x 6 cm) = 10 cups (2.4 liters)
10x 2.5 inches (25 x 6 cm) = 12 cups (2.8 liters)
Bundt Pan โ volume varies because of various designs
10ร3 inch (25 x 8 cm) = 10-12 cups (2.8 liters)
Tube Pan:
9ร3 inches (23 x 8 cm) = ย 12 cups (2.8 liters)
Jelly Roll Pans โ 1 inch (2.5 cm) tall
10ร15 inches (27 x 39 cm) = 10 cups (2.4 liters)
12ร17 inches (32 x 44 cm) = 12 cups (2.8 liters)
Loaf Pans โ about 3 inches (8 cm) tallย
8ร4 inch (20 x 10 cm) = 4 cups (960 ml)
9ร5ย inch (23 x 13 cm) = 8 cups (1.9 liters)
How to Determine the Volume Yourself
If you want to calculate a panโs volume yourself, itโs so easy! Simply fill your pan with 1 cup of water at a time and count until itโs full. Thatโs what I do!
How Much Does This Pan Hold?
Hereโs a helpful list of the most common baking pans and the volume of batter they hold, as well as which pans hold the same amount of batter. ***Keep in mind that the volumes listed mean you are filling the pan all the way to the top with batter, which isnโt ideal for baked goods. Unless otherwise noted, filling pans around 2/3 full is the best practice. This leaves room for rising.
- For example, my vanilla cake recipe yields around 8 cups of batter which I divide between 3 9ร2 inch round cake pans. (Each hold 8 cups of batter!) Each cake layer has a little less than 3 cups batter each.
Use the following section to determine which baking pans can be substituted for others based on their full volume.
Round Pans
- 6ร2 inch round pan holds 4 cups of batter, the same as an 8ร4 inch loaf pan. Fun discovery! Cupcake recipes yielding 12-16 cupcakes fit wonderfully in 3 6-inch cake pans. See my post for 6 inch cake recipes for more information.
- 8ร2 inch round pan holds 6 cups of batter.
- 9ร2 inch round pan holds 8 cups of batter, the same as an 8ร2 inch square pan and a 9ร5 inch loaf pan.
- 10ร2 inch round pan holds 10-11 cups of batter, the same as a 9ร2 inch square pan, 11ร7 inch pan, 10ร15 inch jelly roll pan, 10ร3 inch Bundt pan, and a 9ร2.5 inch springform pan.
Square Pans
- 8ร2 inch square pan holds 8 cups of batter, the same as a 9ร2 inch round pan and a 9ร5 inch loaf pan.
- 9ร2 inch square pan holds 10 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch round pan, 11ร7 inch pan, 9ร2.5 inch springform pan, 10ร3 inch Bundt pan, and a 10ร15 inch jelly roll pan.
- 10ร2 inch square pan holds 12 cups of batter, the same as a 12ร17 inch jelly roll pan, 10ร3 inch Bundt pan, 10ร2.5 inch springform pan, and a 9-inch tube pan.
Rectangle Pans
- 11ร7 inch pan holds 10 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch round pan, 9ร2-inch square pan, 9ร2.5 inch springform pan, 10ร3 inch Bundt pan, and a 10ร15 inch jelly roll pan.
- 9ร13 inch pan holds 14-16 cups of batter, essentially the same as 2 9ร2-inch round pans.
Jelly Roll Pans
- 10ร15 inch jelly roll pan holds 10 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch round pan, 9-inch square pan, 11ร7 pan, 9ร2.5 inch springform pan, 10-inch Bundt pan.
- 12ร17 inch jelly roll pan holds 12 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch square pan, 10-inch Bundt pan, 10ร2.5 inch springform pan, and a 9-inch tube pan.
Bundt Pans
10-inch Bundt pans are the standard size. I actually have several that are 9.5 inches and most Bundt cake recipes still fit.
- 10-inch Bundt pan holds 10-12 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch round pan (10 cups), 9ร2 inch square pan (10 cups), 10ร2 inch square pan (12 cups), 11ร7 inch pan (10 cups), 10ร15 inch jelly roll pan (10 cups), 12ร17 inch jelly roll pan (12 cups), 9ร2.5 inch springform pan (10 cups), 10ร2.5 inch springform pan (12 cups) and a 9-inch tube pan (12 cups).
Tube Pans
9ร3 inch tube pans are the standard size. I have a few that are 8 inch and 10 inch and most recipes using tube pans fit nicely in all.
- 9ร3 inch tube pan holds 12 cups of batter, the same as 10ร2 inch square pan, 12ร17 inch jelly roll pan, and a 10ร2.5 inch springform pan.
Springform Pans
- 9ร2.5 inch springform pan holds 10 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch round pan, 9ร2 inch square pan, 11ร7 inch pan, a 10ร15 inch jelly roll pan.
- 10ร2.5 inch springform pan holds 12 cups of batter, the same as a 10ร2 inch square pan, 12ร17 inch jelly roll pan, and a 9ร3 inch tube pan.
Loaf Pans
- 8ร4 inch loaf pan holds 4 cups of batter, the same as a 6ร2 inch round pan.
- 9ร5 inch loaf pan holds 8 cups of batter, the same as a 9ร2 inch round pan and an 8ร2 inch square pan.
Substituting Cake Pans
Iโm piggy-backing this one to the section above because thereโs often a need to substitute different cake pans. If substituting a baking pan that holds the same amount of batter, be wary of the baking time because the dimensions of the baked good will change. Always keep your eye on the oven and begin checking for doneness earlier than the recipe states.
Remember, only fill pans about 1/2 to 2/3 full unless otherwise instructed in the recipe.

FREE PRINTABLE
Here is a free printable you can hang in your kitchen workspace: Volumes & Measurements of Common Baking Pans
Adapting Recipes to Fit Certain Cake Pans
Adapting recipes to fit the cake pans you have (or need) can often be complicated. While itโs always best to stick to the written recipe, sometimes you need to make adjustments and thatโs where a little math can help.
1) Determine the volume your pan can hold. You can also determine the actual surface area of the pan in square inches. I actually used Food 52โs article by Alice Medrich on this subject to brush up on my math!
- For square and rectangle pans, multiply the length of the sides. For example, a 9ร13 inch baking pan is 117 square inches. 9ร13 = 117.
- For circle pans, determine the area by multiplying the radius squared by ฯ. (ฯ = 3.14, the radius is half of the diameter, and squaring means multiplying a number by itself.)ย For example, the area of a 9-inch round pan is 63. The radius is 4.5. 4.5ร4.5 = 20.25. Multiply that by 3.14 = 63.5.
2) After you determine the volume your pan can hold or its square inches, you can confidently make baking pan substitutions.
- For example, if a 9ร13 inch pan is 117 square inches and a 9-inch round pan is 63.5 square inches, you can be confident that the volume from one 9ร13 inch pan can fit into TWO 9-inch round pans (approximately 120 square inches total).
What if volumes and square inches donโt match up perfectly? Youโll have to adjust the recipe and this requires more math.
For example, if you want to adapt a 9-inch round cake to a 10-inch round cake, youโll need to make adjustments. A 9-inch round cake pan is 63.5 square inches/holds 8 cups of batter. A 10-inch round cake pan is 78.5 square inches/holds 10-11 cups of batter. Without any adaptions, your 10-inch cake layers will be very thin. Youโll need to increase the batter by 25%.
The get this percentage, work with the cups or square inches. Subtract the number you have (8 cups) from the number you want (10 cups). Divide that (2 cups) by what you have (8 cups), then multiply by 100. (The universal way to find a percentage.) This equals 25%.
How to Avoid the Math
What works for me most of the time (because I donโt trust myself with too much math!) is to 1.5x the recipe or even making 2 batches of batter. (For best success, taste, and texture, I always recommend making separate full batches instead of doubling. Doubling risks over-mixing or under-mixing and could overwhelm your mixer.) Then, I use leftover batter to make a few cupcakes on the side to freeze for another time.
Itโs better to have extra batter rather than not enough.
What About Eggs?
If you need part of an egg for when you are adjusting a recipe, crack the egg, beat it, and whatever percentage of that mixture you need. If you need 1/3 of an egg and you have 3 Tablespoons of beaten egg, use 1 Tablespoon. For a more precise amount and if you donโt trust your measurements, you can also weigh the beaten egg on a kitchen scale to determine exactly how much you need.
- Cover, refrigerate, and add any leftovers to your scrambled eggs the next morning!

Amount of Batter Some of My Cake Recipes Yield
The following list will help if you need to adjust my recipes for different pan sizes. These are the recipes I know and all measurements are approximate.
- Checkerboard Cake: about 8 cups
- Vanilla Naked Cake: about 8 cups
- Vanilla Cake: about 8 cups
- Confetti Cake: about 8 cups
- Chocolate Cake: about 6 cups
- White Cake: about 7 cups
- Banana Cake: about 6 cups
- Strawberry Cake: about 7 cups
- Snickerdoodle Cake: about 8 cups
- Coconut Cake: about 7-8 cups
- Red Velvet Cake: about 6-7 cups
- Lemon Cake: about 7 cups
My Favorite Baking Pans
I have a list for you! Stock your kitchen with these 8 best baking pans and these 10 cake baking & decorating tools.
The next time you have a question about cake pan sizes & conversions, I hope you find your answer in this post so you can confidently make the adjustments needed.



















Reader Comments and Reviews
Wow. Just wow! The recipe information is so detailed and has given me the confidence to try to bake a cake from scratch! A friend brought the lemon blue berry cake for a dinner party at my home and it was amazing! I asked if she would bake another for a family birthday and she was not going to be in town so she sent me the recipe. I read it carefully and said, I can do this! We will see how it works out. Iโve prepped as much as I can today and will bake the cake tomorrow to bring to a dinner party! The instructions are so detailed and answered so many of my questions. Wish me luck!! I have not baked anything from scratch in probably 40 yearsโbecause I know what I am good at! . I hope this is a new adventure as I LOVE to cook!
Wow. Just wow! The information provided, so detailed and has given me the confidence to bake a cake from scratch. A friend brought the lemon blue berry cake for a dinner party at my home and it was amazing! I asked if she would bake another for a family birthday and she was not going to be in town so she sent me the recipe. I read it carefully and said, I can do this! We will see how it works out. Iโve prepped as much as I can today and will bake the cake tomorrow to bring to a dinner party! The instructed are so detailed and answered so many of my questions. Wish me luck!! I hope to become a baker!
If Iโve followed correctly, I should be able to use an 8โณ square for my quiche that I usually bake in a 9โณ round pan. Yes?
Hi Diane, yes, that should be fine!
Thank you so much for all the helpful scaling information! Although total volumes differ, your scaling math suggests that a 9ร5 loaf pan has about half the bottom surface area as a 9ร9 square cake pan (45 vs. 81). If you want to make less cake for a smaller group, would you advise trying to bake half of a recipe designed for a 9ร9 square cake pan in a 9ร5 loaf pan? Or, given your experience baking differing batters at different levels (less than 1/2 to 2/3 full) in differing pans, would you expect the higher walls of the loaf pan to change the way the batter inside bakes significantly? Would it be safer to attempt to build an interior wall with aluminum foil to change the 9ร9 pan to a 9ร5?
Iโm going to buy some of the Fat Daddio pans. I prefer to make square cakes vs round, so will be buying 8x8x2 pans.
Other than tradition, is there a reason most cakes are done in round pans? I read elsewhere that square pans for cakes risk dry corners โ is that true?
Hi Elise! Square cakes do lend to drying out since the corners bake faster.
This is awesome. Thanks so much for this. I have been baking for 60 years.
This will be so so helpful!!!!
I live your recipes.
Happy Baking