Numbers
Roman to Arabic Numeral Converter
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A Roman to Arabic numeral converter turns a Roman numeral like MMXXVI into the everyday number 2026. Roman numerals combine seven letters — I, V, X, L, C, D, and M — using an additive system with a subtractive twist, where a smaller value before a larger one is subtracted, so IV is four and IX is nine. Reading them quickly takes practice, and that is where this tool helps: type the numeral and it returns the Arabic value instantly, applying the subtraction rule correctly. It is useful for decoding dates on buildings, book copyrights, and film credits, for students learning the system, and for anyone faced with a clock face or chapter heading in Roman form. Letters are read case-insensitively and stray characters are ignored. Use it to check your own reading or to convert a numeral you cannot decode at a glance.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Type the Roman numeral you want to convert.
- Click Generate to see the Arabic number.
- Read the result, shown beside the cleaned numeral.
- Copy the number for your notes or document.
Use Cases
- •Decoding a date carved on a building or monument
- •Reading the Roman-numeral copyright year in film or TV credits
- •Checking a Roman numeral on a clock face or book chapter
- •Learning and practising how the subtractive rule works
- •Converting a numeral you cannot decode at a glance
Tips
- →Case does not matter — mmxxvi converts the same as MMXXVI.
- →Watch for subtractive pairs like IV, IX, XL, and CM.
- →Use it to decode copyright years in old film credits.
- →For the reverse direction, use a number-to-Roman generator.
FAQ
how does the subtractive rule work
When a smaller-value letter appears before a larger one, it is subtracted: IV is 5 − 1 = 4, IX is 10 − 1 = 9, and XL is 50 − 10 = 40. Otherwise letters are added together. The converter applies this automatically as it reads the numeral.
what letters do roman numerals use
Seven letters: I is 1, V is 5, X is 10, L is 50, C is 100, D is 500, and M is 1,000. Combining them with the additive and subtractive rules can represent the numbers traditionally used up to a few thousand.
does it handle lowercase or messy input
Yes. Input is read case-insensitively and any characters that are not valid Roman letters are ignored, so a stray space or punctuation mark will not stop the conversion. The cleaned numeral is shown alongside the result.