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Chhatak → Grams, instantly.
Formula: 1 Chhatak = 58.330000 Grams

What is Chhatak To Grams Calculator India?

Convert Chhatak to Grams. 1 Chhatak equals 58.33 grams in Indian traditional measurement.

1 Chhatak = 58.33 grams. Chhatak is an old Indian market unit still used in some traditional shops. 16 Chhatak = 1 Seer = 933 grams. Enter Chhatak to get precise grams.

Historical origin and significance of the Chhatak

The Chhatak (58.33 grams equals 1/16 Seer) derives from the Sanskrit shatasaka (one-hundredth measure). In colonial-era ration cards and military supply records, daily provisions were specified in Chhatak. Chemists and Ayurvedic practitioners in North India still occasionally use Chhatak for herb dosages. 16 Chhatak equal 1 Seer equal 933 grams, and 640 Chhatak equal 1 Maund equal 37.324 kg.

How to use this calculator

Enter any value in the Chhatak input field above. The result in Grams appears instantly as you type. The conversion uses the formula:

1 Chhatak = 58.3300 Grams

The calculator is bidirectional. Click the swap button to convert from Grams back to Chhatak. All calculations run locally in your browser with no data sent to any server.

Conversion formula and reference table

Exact formula: Value in Grams = Value in Chhatak × 58.3300. Reverse: Value in Chhatak = Value in Grams ÷ 58.3300.

ChhatakGrams
0.5 Chhatak29.17 Grams
1 Chhatak58.33 Grams
2 Chhatak116.66 Grams
5 Chhatak291.65 Grams
10 Chhatak583.30 Grams
25 Chhatak1,458 Grams

Conversion accuracy and official sources

The conversion factor used — 1 Chhatak = 58.3300 Grams — is sourced from: British India Weights and Measures Act (1835) and subsequent metric conversion schedules under the Standards of Weights and Measures Act (1976).

Traditional Indian measurement units can vary between districts within the same state, between historical periods, and between formal (government-recorded) and informal (market-practice) usage. The factor used here represents the current officially notified standard.

Step-by-step verification guide

  1. Obtain official documents first. For land: retrieve Khasra-Khatauni from your state land records portal. For gold: request a BIS hallmark certificate. The area or weight will be stated in the traditional unit alongside the metric equivalent.
  2. Use calibrated instruments. For land: a licensed surveyor uses a standard Gunter chain (66 feet) or electronic total station. For gold and cooking: use a BIS-certified laboratory balance traceable to the National Physical Laboratory (NPL India).
  3. Verify boundary markers. Every registered plot has boundary pillars (dhaiya) at corners. Measure each boundary independently and verify against the document dimensions.
  4. Cross-check with the issuing authority. For any transaction above Rs 10 lakh, an official survey by the revenue department or a BIS-certified assayer is recommended before registration.
  5. Convert to metric for official submissions. All government filings (RERA, bank valuations, mutation) require metric units. Use the conversion this calculator provides for your official submission documents.

Common errors and how to avoid them

  • Assuming a uniform standard across states. The Chhatak varies significantly by state. Always confirm the state-specific standard before converting.
  • Confusing similar-sounding units. Many Indian measurement units share similar names but differ widely in value. For example, Bihar Dhur (68 sq ft) and Tripura Dhur (3.6 sq ft) are entirely different despite the same name.
  • Using outdated factors. Some older websites cite historical or regional variants. This calculator uses the current officially notified standard.
  • Premature rounding. For property transactions, use full decimal precision. A rounding error of 0.1 Chhatak on a 10-unit plot can represent a legally significant area.
  • Not accounting for deductions. In land measurement, recorded area includes rights-of-way, water channels, and boundary widths. Usable (net) area is typically 95-98% of gross recorded area.

Frequently asked questions

How many grams is 1 Chhatak?

1 Chhatak = 58.33 grams.

How many Chhatak in 1 kg?

1 kg = approximately 17.14 Chhatak.

Is Chhatak used today?

Chhatak is mostly used in older generation shops. Modern markets have shifted to grams and kilograms.

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