The Stone: Britain's Unusual Weight Unit

A 14-Pound Tradition

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"I weigh 11 stone." For Americans, this sentence is incomprehensible. For Brits and Irish, it's the most natural way to discuss body weight. The stone is a unit of mass equal to 14 pounds (6.35 kg) that has been used in Britain for over 600 years and stubbornly persists today—even as the UK has otherwise adopted metric measurements.

History of the Stone

The stone has ancient origins, likely named because actual stones were used as weights in early trading. However, "a stone" meant different weights for different goods:

  • Stone of wool: 14 pounds
  • Stone of beef: 8 pounds (some regions)
  • Stone of glass: 5 pounds
  • Stone of wax: 12 pounds

The 14-pound stone became dominant because it was the standard for wool—medieval England's most important export. When Parliament standardized weights in 1824, the 14-pound stone became the only legal stone.

Conversion Table

StonePoundsKilograms
7 st98 lb44.5 kg
8 st112 lb50.8 kg
9 st126 lb57.2 kg
10 st140 lb63.5 kg
11 st154 lb69.9 kg
12 st168 lb76.2 kg
13 st182 lb82.6 kg
14 st196 lb88.9 kg
15 st210 lb95.3 kg
16 st224 lb101.6 kg

How to Express Stone Weight

In the UK and Ireland, body weight is expressed in stone and pounds:

  • "10 stone" = 140 lb = 63.5 kg
  • "10 stone 7" = 10 st 7 lb = 147 lb = 66.7 kg
  • "10 and a half stone" = 10 st 7 lb

You never say "10.5 stone" with a decimal. Instead, the extra pounds are stated separately. Half a stone is 7 pounds.

Converting Your Weight

Pounds to stone:

  1. Divide by 14 to get stone
  2. The remainder is the extra pounds

Example: 165 lb ÷ 14 = 11 with remainder 11
Result: 11 stone 11 pounds

Where Stone Is Still Used

United Kingdom

Body weight is almost universally discussed in stone. Scales sold in the UK typically show stone/pounds as well as kilograms. Medical records may use kilograms, but people think in stone.

Ireland

Like the UK, Irish people use stone for personal weight despite the country being otherwise metric.

Australia (Historically)

Older Australians may remember their weight in stone from before metrication in the 1970s.

Not Used

The United States never adopted the stone. Americans use pounds exclusively (or kilograms in medical settings).

Why 14 Pounds?

The 14-pound stone relates to the old British weight system:

  • 14 pounds = 1 stone
  • 2 stone (28 lb) = 1 quarter
  • 4 quarters (112 lb) = 1 hundredweight (cwt)
  • 20 hundredweight (2,240 lb) = 1 long ton

This system made sense for the wool trade, where wool was sold in standard sacks and bales based on these units. The math worked out evenly in the days before calculators.

Common Body Weights

DescriptionStonePoundsKilograms
Small woman7-8 st98-112 lb44-51 kg
Average woman9-11 st126-154 lb57-70 kg
Average man11-13 st154-182 lb70-83 kg
Large man14-16 st196-224 lb89-102 kg

The Stone's Future

Despite UK metrication efforts since the 1970s, the stone refuses to disappear. Unlike most imperial units that have faded from everyday use, the stone remains deeply embedded in British culture for discussing body weight.

Interestingly, EU regulations that prohibited displaying imperial units on scales (requiring metric-only) were relaxed in 2007 to allow supplementary imperial displays—a small victory for the stone.

Conclusion

The stone is a quirky survivor of Britain's imperial past—a 14-pound unit that persists in the 21st century purely through cultural inertia. For travelers to the UK or Ireland, or anyone communicating with Brits about weight, understanding the stone is essential.

Just remember: 1 stone = 14 pounds = 6.35 kg. And unlike most weights, you express remainders in pounds, not decimals: "10 stone 7," not "10.5 stone."

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The Stone: Britain's Unusual Weight Unit | YounitConverter