Skip to content

Roman Numeral Converter

Convert between Roman numerals and Arabic numbers. Includes date converter with support for multiple separator formats.

Roman Numeral Converter

Enter a number (1–3999) or Roman numeral to convert.

MCMXCIV = 1994

Roman Numeral Date Converter

Enter a date in numeric or Roman numeral form. Accepts - . \ / | or space as separators.

1776/07/04 = MDCCLXXVI/VII/IV
1776 → MDCCLXXVI
07 → VII
04 → IV

Roman Numeral Reference

RomanIVXLCDM
Arabic1510501005001,000

Common Subtractive Combinations

IV = 4
IX = 9
XL = 40
XC = 90
CD = 400
CM = 900

How to Read and Write Roman Numerals

Roman numerals use seven symbols to represent numbers. They originated in ancient Rome and are still used in certain contexts today, such as clock faces, book chapters, movie credits, and major events like the Super Bowl and Olympics.

The Seven Base Symbols

SymbolIVXLCDM
Value1510501005001,000

Rules for Writing Roman Numerals

  1. Additive rule: When numerals are in descending order (left to right), add their values. VII = 5 + 1 + 1 = 7
  2. Subtractive rule: When a smaller numeral precedes a larger one, subtract the smaller value. IV = 5 − 1 = 4, IX = 10 − 1 = 9
  3. Repetition limit: A symbol can be repeated up to 3 times consecutively. Use subtractive notation instead of four repetitions: IV not IIII.
  4. Only certain subtractive pairs exist: I before V or X; X before L or C; C before D or M.

Examples

ArabicRomanBreakdown
3III1 + 1 + 1
14XIV10 + (5 − 1)
49XLIX(50 − 10) + (10 − 1)
399CCCXCIX100 + 100 + 100 + (100 − 10) + (10 − 1)
1994MCMXCIV1000 + (1000 − 100) + (100 − 10) + (5 − 1)
2025MMXXV1000 + 1000 + 10 + 10 + 5

Date Conversion

To convert a date, enter each part (year, month, day) separated by -, ., /, \, |, or a space. Each part is converted independently. For example, 2025/03/19 becomes MMXXV/III/XIX.

History of Roman Numerals

Roman numerals were widely used throughout the Roman Empire and continued in common use across Europe well after its fall. Arabic numerals (the 0–9 system we use today) began replacing them around the 14th century, primarily because arithmetic operations are much easier with a positional number system that includes zero.

Despite this, Roman numerals persist in many formal and traditional contexts, valued for their distinctiveness and aesthetic quality.

Related Calculators

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the largest number you can write in Roman numerals?

Using standard notation, the largest number is 3,999 (MMMCMXCIX). Historically, larger numbers used a vinculum (bar above) to multiply by 1,000, but this is not commonly used today.

Is there a Roman numeral for zero?

No. The Roman numeral system has no symbol for zero. The concept of zero was introduced later through the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.

What does the subtractive rule mean?

When a smaller numeral appears before a larger one, you subtract it. IV = 5 − 1 = 4, IX = 10 − 1 = 9, XL = 50 − 10 = 40, XC = 100 − 10 = 90, CD = 500 − 100 = 400, CM = 1000 − 100 = 900.

Why are Roman numerals still used?

Roman numerals are used on clock faces, in movie credits (copyright years), for Super Bowl numbering, book chapters, outlines, and formal or decorative contexts.