🌐 Crore to Million Converter
Switch amounts from crore to million for cross-regional financial communication.
Enter a value in crores to see the equivalent in millions. Perfect when preparing reports for international stakeholders.
1 crore = 10 million. Enter decimals for partial amounts or negatives for liabilities.
Million
30 million
Back to Crore
3 crore
Reflects the original input; use it to double-check or share totals.
How to Use This Calculator
Enter crores
Provide the amount in crores. Decimals and negatives are allowed.
Review millions
Multiply by 10 to get millions. The converter automates this step and formats the result.
Validate the reverse conversion
Use the reverse output to confirm accuracy or share the same number back in crore.
Formula
Million = Crore × 10
Crore = Million ÷ 10
Use the formula breakdown to confirm the calculation logic or perform the conversion manually if needed.
Full Description
Financial documents in India often use crores. When presenting to global audiences, converting to millions ensures clarity. This tool makes the conversion instant, preventing misinterpretation during meetings or while preparing investor summaries.
Decimals help when discussing partial project budgets or investment tranches, while negative values represent cash outflows or liabilities using the same logic.
Combine with the Crore to Lakh or Million to Billion converters depending on your audience’s familiarity with the numbering system.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many million in a crore?
One crore equals 10 million. That’s the multiplier applied by the calculator.
Does it support large numbers?
Yes. JavaScript handles large integers accurately within typical financial ranges. For extremely large values, consider using arbitrary-precision libraries.
What about formatting with commas?
The result uses locale-sensitive formatting. For Indian-style grouping (e.g., 1,00,00,000), format the output in a spreadsheet after conversion.
Can I convert million to crore?
Yes. Enter the amount in crore or use the reverse field, which divides millions by 10 to return to crore.