Million ⇄ Lakh Converter
Convert between Million (1,000,000) and Lakh (1,00,000). Set decimals and see quick Crore/Million/Lakh breakdown.
1 Million = 10 Lakh
Enter a value and click Calculate
How does the Million to Lakh converter works
Sometimes you see a number written in Millions, other times in Lakhs or Crores. It’s the same quantity, just a different way of naming and grouping digits. This little converter takes out the mental math so you can switch between systems instantly.
The one rule to remember
- 1 Million = 10 Lakh
- 1 Lakh = 0.1 Million
(And for context: 1 Crore = 100 Lakh = 10 Million)
That’s the whole engine behind the tool.
How the converter works
- You type a number.
- Choose the direction: Million → Lakh or Lakh → Million.
- Click Calculate.
- The tool does a quick multiply or divide (×10 or ×0.1), then shows a clean result.
- It can also display the value in Crore and format digits in the familiar style (Indian grouping for Lakh/Crore, international for Million).
No exchange rates, nothing complicated—just unit conversion.
Real-life examples
- 2.5 Million → Lakh
2.5 × 10 = 25 Lakh
That’s 25,00,000 in Indian commas, or 2,500,000 internationally. Also equals 0.25 Crore. - 75 Lakh → Million
75 × 0.1 = 7.5 Million
Written as 75,00,000 (IN) = 7,500,000 (Intl). Also equals 0.75 Crore. - 1.2 Crore (side note)
1.2 Crore = 120 Lakh = 12 Million. Handy when reports flip between Crore and Million.
Why the commas look different
- International style (Million/Billion): 1,234,567
- Indian style (Lakh/Crore): 12,34,567
Same number, different grouping. A good converter shows the right commas for the unit you’re using so it “looks right” at a glance.
Rounding that won’t drive you crazy
- For headlines or quick updates, 0–1 decimal is perfect (e.g., 7.5 Million → 75 Lakh).
- For financial docs or investor decks, use 2–3 decimals (or stick to whole numbers if that’s your policy).
- Best practice: convert first, then round the final result. Rounding mid-way can create small mismatches.
Common mix-ups (quick fixes)
- Currency vs unit: “₹ 25 Lakh” vs “$ 2.5 Million” are not directly comparable—one is INR, one is USD. This converter doesn’t change currencies, only units.
- Comma confusion: If 2,500,000 shows as 25,00,000, don’t panic—it’s the same value with Indian grouping.
- Forgetting Crore: Keep this mental check: 1 Crore = 100 Lakh = 10 Million. It’s great for sanity checks on big numbers.
When to use which
- Use Million/Billion for global audiences and international investor communication.
- Use Lakh/Crore for Indian audiences, local media, or government filings.
The converter lets you “speak the audience’s number language” without changing the actual quantity.
Quick cheat sheet
- 1 Million = 10 Lakh
- 1 Lakh = 0.1 Million
- 1 Crore = 100 Lakh = 10 Million
Bottom line: Type your number, pick the direction, and the converter applies ×10 or ×0.1. With clean formatting and optional Crore view, you’ll get numbers that make instant sense—whether you’re drafting a report, prepping a pitch, or just double-checking figures for a conversation.
