Rem to Pixel Converter
1 rem = 16.0000 px
FORMULA
1 rem = 16.0000 px
CONVERSION TABLE
| Rem (rem) | Pixel (px) |
|---|---|
| 1 rem | 16 px |
| 5 rem | 80 px |
| 10 rem | 160 px |
| 25 rem | 400 px |
| 50 rem | 800 px |
| 100 rem | 1,600 px |
| 250 rem | 4,000 px |
| 500 rem | 8,000 px |
| 1,000 rem | 16,000 px |
COMMON VALUES
RELATED CONVERSIONS
About Rem (rem)
The root em (rem) is a CSS unit relative to the root element's font size, typically 16px in browsers. Unlike em, which compounds when nested, rem always references the same base, making it the preferred unit for consistent, accessible web typography and spacing in modern CSS frameworks.
About Pixel (px)
The pixel is the fundamental unit of digital display, representing a single addressable point of color on a screen. Screen resolutions are described in pixels (1920x1080 for Full HD, 3840x2160 for 4K), and web designers use pixels for layout dimensions, font sizes, and image specifications.
How to Convert Rem to Pixel
The conversion formula is: 1 rem = 16.0000 px. To convert from Rem (rem) to Pixel (px), use the formula above or the interactive converter at the top of this page.
FAQ
How many Pixel in 1 Rem?
1 Rem (rem) equals 16.0000 Pixel (px).
How to convert Rem to Pixel?
Multiply the Rem value by 16.0000 to get the equivalent in Pixel. Formula: 1 rem = 16.0000 px
What is the formula for Rem to Pixel conversion?
1 rem = 16.0000 px
Glossary
-
Point (Typography)
A unit of type size. The desktop publishing point equals 1/72 of an inch.
-
Pixel
A pixel (picture element) is the smallest individually addressable point of color on a digital display or in a digital image.
-
DPI & PPI
DPI (dots per inch) measures print output resolution; PPI (pixels per inch) measures screen display resolution—both describe spatial density of image elements.
-
Em
The em is a relative typographic unit equal to the current element's font size; in a 16 px context, 1 em equals 16 px.
-
Pica
The pica is a typographic unit equal to 12 points or exactly 1/6 of an inch (approximately 4.233 mm), used primarily to measure column widths and other layout dimensions.