Millifarads to Farads Converter

Convert millifarads to farads instantly with our free capacitance conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

mF
=
F
0.001
Farads (F)
1 mF = 0.001 F
🔄 Swap Units (Farads → Millifarads)
1 mF
=
0.001 F
1 Millifarad = 0.001 Farads

How to Convert Millifarads to Farads

To convert a capacitance measurement from millifarads to farads, divide the capacitance value by the conversion factor. Since one millifarad is equal to 0.001 farads, you can use this formula:

farads = millifarads ÷ 1,000

The capacitance in farads is equal to the millifarads divided by 1,000.

Example: Convert 5 millifarads to farads.

Using the formula: farads = millifarads ÷ 1,000

farads = 5 mF ÷ 1,000 = 0.005 F

Therefore, 5 millifarads is equal to 0.005 farads.

How Many Farads Are in a Millifarad?

There are 0.001 farads in one millifarad, which is why we use this value in the formula above.

1 mF = 0.001 F

What Is a Millifarad?

The millifarad (symbol: mF) is a unit of electrical capacitance equal to one thousandth (10−³) of a farad. The prefix "milli" comes from the Latin "mille" meaning thousand, and in the metric system it denotes a factor of one thousandth. While the millifarad is less commonly used than microfarads or picofarads in everyday electronics, it serves as a convenient intermediate unit. Values in the millifarad range are encountered in power supply filtering, audio crossover networks, and some energy storage applications. Supercapacitors and certain electrolytic capacitors used in power electronics may have capacitances expressed in millifarads. For example, a large electrolytic capacitor rated at 10,000 μF could equivalently be expressed as 10 mF. The millifarad is part of the International System of Units (SI) and maintains the same fundamental definition as the farad, just scaled by a factor of 10−³.

One millifarad is equal to:

  • 0.001 farads (F)
  • 1,000 microfarads (μF)
  • 1,000,000 nanofarads (nF)
  • 1,000,000,000 picofarads (pF)
  • 10-12 abfarads (abF)
  • 898,755,224.01 statfarads (stF)

What Is a Farad?

The farad (symbol: F) is the SI derived unit of electrical capacitance, named after the English physicist Michael Faraday. It is defined as the capacitance of a capacitor that has a potential difference of one volt when charged by one coulomb of electricity. One farad is an extremely large capacitance value. In practical electronics, capacitors are rarely measured in farads directly. Instead, sub-multiples such as microfarads (μF), nanofarads (nF), and picofarads (pF) are far more commonly used. A one-farad capacitor would be physically very large using traditional dielectric materials. However, modern supercapacitors (also called ultracapacitors) can achieve capacitances of several farads or even thousands of farads, making the farad a more practical unit in energy storage applications. The farad can be expressed in terms of other SI units as: 1 F = 1 s&sup4;·A² / (kg·m²) = 1 C/V = 1 C²/J = 1 s/Ω = 1 s²/H.

One farad is equal to:

  • 1,000 millifarads (mF)
  • 1,000,000 microfarads (μF)
  • 1,000,000,000 nanofarads (nF)
  • 1,000,000,000,000 picofarads (pF)
  • 10-9 abfarads (abF)
  • 898,755,224,014.74 statfarads (stF)

Understanding Capacitance

Capacitance is a fundamental electrical property that describes a component's ability to store electrical energy in an electric field. A capacitor, the component that exhibits capacitance, consists of two conductive plates separated by an insulating material called a dielectric.

When a voltage is applied across a capacitor, positive charge accumulates on one plate and negative charge on the other, creating an electric field in the dielectric. The capacitance (C) is defined as the ratio of the electric charge (Q) stored on each plate to the voltage (V) across the capacitor: C = Q / V.

The SI unit of capacitance is the farad (F), named after Michael Faraday. One farad equals the capacitance when one coulomb of charge produces one volt of potential difference. In practice, a farad is an extremely large unit, so capacitance values in electronic circuits are typically expressed in sub-multiples: millifarads (mF), microfarads (μF), nanofarads (nF), and picofarads (pF).

SI vs. CGS Units

The International System of Units (SI) uses the farad and its metric prefixed sub-multiples. The older centimetre–gram–second (CGS) system includes two capacitance units: the abfarad (from the electromagnetic sub-system, equal to 10&sup9; farads) and the statfarad (from the electrostatic sub-system, approximately 1.1126 × 10−¹² farads).

While CGS units are largely obsolete in modern engineering, they still appear in some physics textbooks and older scientific literature. Understanding the conversion between these systems is important for interpreting historical data and theoretical calculations.

Factors Affecting Capacitance

  • Plate area — Larger plate area increases capacitance
  • Distance between plates — Smaller separation increases capacitance
  • Dielectric material — Higher dielectric constant (κ) increases capacitance
  • Temperature — Can affect the dielectric constant and thus capacitance

Common Capacitance Values in Electronics

  • Supercapacitors: 0.1 F to 3,000+ F
  • Electrolytic capacitors: 0.1 μF to 100,000 μF
  • Film capacitors: 1 nF to 100 μF
  • Ceramic capacitors: 1 pF to 100 μF
  • Trimmer/variable capacitors: 1 pF to 500 pF

Practical Tips for Capacitance Conversion

  • When working with SI capacitance units (F, mF, μF, nF, pF), remember that each step is a factor of 1,000: 1 F = 1,000 mF = 1,000,000 μF = 1,000,000,000 nF = 1,000,000,000,000 pF.
  • To convert between adjacent SI prefix levels, simply move the decimal point three places. For example, 4,700 pF = 4.7 nF = 0.0047 μF.
  • Capacitor markings on small components (like ceramic capacitors) are often in picofarads using a three-digit code. The first two digits are significant figures and the third is the multiplier (number of zeros). For example, "473" means 47,000 pF = 47 nF.
  • When reading schematics, pay close attention to the unit prefix. Confusing μF and nF (a factor of 1,000 difference) is a common source of circuit errors.
  • For CGS units (abfarads and statfarads), remember that 1 abfarad = 10&sup9; F is enormous, while 1 statfarad ≈ 1.1126 pF is tiny. These units are rarely used in modern practice.
  • Online calculators and conversion tools are helpful, but always double-check critical calculations by hand, especially for precision applications in filter design or timing circuits.

Millifarads to Farads Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from millifarads to farads.

Millifarads Farads (F)
1 mF0.001
2 mF0.002
3 mF0.003
4 mF0.004
5 mF0.005
6 mF0.006
7 mF0.007
8 mF0.008
9 mF0.009
10 mF0.01
11 mF0.011
12 mF0.012
13 mF0.013
14 mF0.014
15 mF0.015
16 mF0.016
17 mF0.017
18 mF0.018
19 mF0.019
20 mF0.02
21 mF0.021
22 mF0.022
23 mF0.023
24 mF0.024
25 mF0.025
26 mF0.026
27 mF0.027
28 mF0.028
29 mF0.029
30 mF0.03
31 mF0.031
32 mF0.032
33 mF0.033
34 mF0.034
35 mF0.035
36 mF0.036
37 mF0.037
38 mF0.038
39 mF0.039
40 mF0.04

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