International Clothing Size Converter
Enter a size you already know—US 8-10, EU 38-40, Japan 9-11, KR 66, or a body measurement—and compare the closest labels across countries in one result view. Use the result as a shortlist, then confirm the brand’s own measurements before buying.
Size input
Clothing · shoes · measurementsEnter a US shoe size (for example 6, 7, 7.5)
Changing a value updates the result immediately.
Converted result
Same-size references worldwide (26)8-10 in US sizing is closest to 38-40 in EU sizing.
ready to use.
- Visible firstInputs and results stay easy to find.
- Result firstThe main answer appears before extra explanation.
- Less frictionNo signup or unnecessary details before use.
Compare clothing size labels across countries without losing the full table
International shopping pages often mix US, EU, UK, JP, KR and international labels. A number only makes sense when you know the garment type and the sizing system behind it.
This converter keeps clothing, footwear and body-measurement inputs separate. Once you enter one known value, the result card keeps the country table visible so you can compare it against a product’s own size chart.
Why the page keeps all country results visible
A store page may show one country label in the option selector and another in the size chart. Keeping the full table prevents you from losing the reference value while you compare.
- Clothing results show 26 country and region labels at once.
- The source label remains in the table, so the baseline is not hidden.
- Unavailable combinations are not invented; the result only shows mapped labels.
Start with gender and garment type
The same number can mean different things for women’s tops, men’s bottoms, dresses or outerwear. Pick the garment context before choosing the region and size.
- US 8-10, EU 38-40 and KR 66 sit on the same candidate row in this default example.
- Men’s EU 48-50 maps differently from women’s sizing.
- Fit and cut still depend on each brand’s measurements.
Use footwear as a length-first check
Shoe sizes are closer to a length comparison than a garment-size comparison. Enter the label you know and compare the nearest mapped row.
- US 6 in the women’s example maps to EU 37.
- JP uses centimeter-style labels, while KR uses millimeters.
- Width, last shape and socks can change the final choice.
Body measurements are only a shortlist tool
Chest, waist and hip inputs estimate a nearby Korean baseline size and then convert that candidate to the selected region. It is not a tailoring measurement system.
- Tops use chest and waist together.
- Bottoms use waist and hip together.
- Set cm/in to the unit you actually measured.
How to read the examples
A result row is a candidate range, not a guaranteed order size.
When the brand chart wins
Sizing systems vary by maker and product line. Always prefer the brand’s own garment measurements when they are published.
- Chest, shoulder, waist and length measurements are available.
- Stretch fabric, knitwear or heavy outerwear changes the fit.
- Shoe width and last shape matter as much as the converted number.
FAQ
Is US 8-10 always EU 38-40?
No. This table treats US 8-10 and EU 38-40 as a common candidate row, but each brand can cut garments differently. Check the product’s chest, waist and hip measurements before ordering.
Why do I see so many countries in the result?
Because international shops often mix labels. The clothing result keeps the 26-country table visible so you can compare US, EU, UK, JP, KR and international labels without switching pages.
Does women’s US shoe 6 equal EU 37?
In this data set, the women’s footwear example maps US 6 to EU 37. Shoe width, last shape and brand-specific centimeter charts still need a separate check.
What should I enter in the measurement tab?
For tops, enter chest and waist. For bottoms, enter waist and hip. Use the cm/in toggle that matches how you measured.
Can I interpret clothing and shoe results the same way?
No. Clothing uses body and garment size systems, while footwear is primarily length-based. Read the two result types separately.
Which side of a range should I pick?
A range such as 8-10 means both sizes are candidates. Start smaller for a close fit and larger for relaxed fits or thicker fabrics.