•
Updated June 2025
•
5-minute read
To calibrate a digital pocket scale: clean the platform, power on and wait 60 seconds, press Tare to zero, then hold the MODE (or CAL) button until the display shows the calibration weight. Place the exact weight on the centre of the platform, wait for the PASS confirmation, and verify with a known object. No calibration weight? Use US nickels — each weighs exactly 5.000 g per the US Mint.
Why digital pocket scales lose calibration
Your pocket scale left the factory calibrated. That’s not the problem. The problem is everything that happens after — being tossed in a drawer, dropped on a hard surface, used in a cold garage, weighed near a running microwave, or just not touched for six months while the battery slowly dies.
Pocket scales use a strain-gauge load cell — a thin strip of metal that bends slightly under weight. That bend changes the electrical resistance of the strip, and the scale translates the change into grams. It’s elegant and precise, but the sensor is sensitive enough to react to things you’d never think twice about:
- Temperature changes. Moving from a cold car to a warm kitchen can shift a reading by 0.1–0.5 g until the sensor equalises.
- Low battery. Scale accuracy drops noticeably when battery voltage falls below about 3V. This is the single most misdiagnosed cause of “broken scale” complaints.
- Electromagnetic interference. Cell phones, microwaves, and fluorescent lighting all generate fields that pocket-scale electronics can pick up. Truweigh’s calibration guide notes that simply moving a phone off the same table as the scale can resolve jumping readings.
- Physical shock. Dropping the scale — even once, onto carpet — can shift the load cell enough to throw off calibration by several tenths of a gram.
- Debris under the platform. A single grain of rice jammed between the platform and the body can add 0.1–0.2 g to every reading, invisibly.
Understanding the cause matters because calibration fixes a drifted sensor. It does not fix a dead battery, a cracked load cell, or debris. If your scale still reads incorrectly after a proper calibration, work through the troubleshooting table further down this page before assuming you need a replacement.
What you need before you start
Gather these before touching the scale. Starting without them is the most common reason calibration fails and has to be repeated:
- A flat, hard surface. A mousepad on a worktop is ideal — it dampens vibration without introducing flex. Do not calibrate on carpet, a washing machine, or anywhere near running fans.
- Fresh batteries. If you haven’t changed the batteries in the last 6 months, change them now. A low battery is the most common reason a calibration “works” but the scale still reads inconsistently the next day.
- Calibration weight or US coins. See the interactive calculator below to work out exactly how many coins you need.
- 5–10 minutes of undisturbed time. The sensor needs to reach thermal equilibrium with the room. Don’t rush the warm-up step.
- Your scale’s required calibration weight. This is usually printed on the bottom of the scale or in the manual. Most pocket scales specify 100 g, 200 g, or 500 g. If you can’t find it, the required weight typically equals the scale’s maximum capacity.
Interactive: how many coins do I need?
No calibration weight? Every US nickel weighs exactly 5.000 grams — per official US Mint specifications. That makes them a reliable substitute, provided the coins are clean and undamaged (worn or dirty coins can deviate by up to 0.1 g each, which compounds across multiple coins).
Use the calculator below to get the exact coin combination for your scale’s required weight. Other US coin weights confirmed by the Mint: penny (post-1983) = 2.500 g; dime = 2.268 g; quarter = 5.670 g.
Coin calibration weight calculator
Enter your scale’s required calibration weight and the calculator will give you the coin combination with the smallest margin for error.
Recommended coin combination
20
US nickels
Important: Use only clean, undamaged coins minted after 1938. Wipe each one with a dry cloth before placing on the scale. Never touch the weighing platform or coins with bare fingers during calibration — skin oils transfer weight.
US coin weight reference (official Mint specifications)
| Coin | Weight (grams) | Good for calibration? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickel (5¢) | 5.000 g | ✓ Best choice | Consistent since 1938. Easy multiples of 5 g. |
| Penny (post-1983) | 2.500 g | ✓ Good | Useful for non-multiple-of-5 targets. Pre-1983 pennies weigh 3.11 g — do not mix. |
| Quarter (25¢) | 5.670 g | △ Usable | Awkward denominations. Use only if nickel combination doesn’t work. |
| Dime (10¢) | 2.268 g | △ Awkward | Odd weight makes round totals hard to achieve. |
A widely shared tip says “just use nickels, they’re perfect.” They are — when new and clean. A Truweigh analysis found that worn, circulated nickels can deviate by up to 0.1 g each. For a 100 g calibration using 20 nickels, that adds up to a potential 2 g error. Always inspect and wipe your coins. If your scale requires precision better than ±0.5 g, invest in a proper calibration weight set — decent sets start at around $8 on Amazon.
[Ad — 300×250 or 468×60]
The 6-step calibration process
These steps work for the vast majority of digital pocket scales. If your scale has a brand-specific sequence, refer to the brand table in the next section and substitute step 4.
- Clean the platformWipe the weighing platform and the area around it with a dry soft cloth. Check underneath the platform for debris — even a hair can add detectable weight. Do not use water or cleaning products; moisture damages the load cell.
- Install fresh batteries and power onIf the battery indicator is anything other than full, replace the batteries before proceeding. Turn the scale on and leave it undisturbed for 60 seconds. This warm-up period lets the strain gauge reach thermal equilibrium. Skipping it is the most common reason calibration has to be repeated.
- Zero the scaleWith nothing on the platform, press the Tare or Zero button and wait until the display settles on exactly 0.00 g (or 0.000 g on a 3-decimal scale). If it won’t hold zero and keeps drifting, check for drafts, vibration, or debris. Do not proceed until you have a stable zero.
- Enter calibration modeThe button sequence varies by brand — see the table below. Most scales respond to pressing and holding the MODE button for 3–5 seconds until the display shows
CALor flashes the required calibration weight in grams. Some scales require the platform to be empty when you do this; others want you to press zero/tare first. Consult your manual if the generic sequence doesn’t work. - Place the calibration weight on the centre of the platformUse your calibration weight or coin combination. Place it gently in the centre of the platform — off-centre placement adds lever-arm error. Do not touch the scale while the reading stabilises. If the display prompts for a specific weight (e.g., flashing “100”) you must use exactly that amount, not an approximation.
- Confirm and verifyWait for the display to show
PASS,END, or return automatically to weighing mode. Remove the calibration weight, zero the scale, then place a known-weight object to verify. A sealed 100 g bag of sugar, a brand-new AA battery (23–25 g), or a US nickel (5.000 g) all work for this check. If the reading is off by more than the scale’s stated tolerance, repeat the process from step 2.
Placing your scale on a mousepad before calibrating does two things at once: it levels minor surface irregularities and dampens the micro-vibrations that cause reading drift. This is particularly helpful if you’re calibrating on a kitchen counter near running appliances.
Button sequences by brand
The calibration button sequence is the part most guides get wrong — or skip entirely. Here are the confirmed sequences for the most common pocket scale brands. If your brand isn’t listed, the generic “hold MODE for 3 seconds” sequence works for most no-name and white-label scales.
| Brand / series | Calibration sequence | Expected display | Required weight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fuzion BX-200 / FX series | Press ON → wait for 0.00 → hold MODE until display shows CAL | CAL 50.0 → place weight → PASS | 50 g |
| American Weigh Scales (AWS) | Press ON/OFF → hold MODE for 3 s until CAL appears | CAL 100 → place weight → PASS | Usually 100 g (model dependent) |
| Truweigh Mini / Classic | Press ON/OFF → wait for 0.0 g → hold MODE key until CAL | CAL 100 → place weight → PASS | 100 g |
| Generic pocket scale (UNIT + ON method) | Turn off → hold UNIT then press ON while still holding UNIT | CAL → display flashes target weight | See bottom of scale |
| Ohaus Scout / Pocket Pro | Press ON/OFF → press CAL button → follow display prompts | CAL 0 → press CAL → CAL [weight] | Varies by model; usually 100–200 g |
| Weighmax series | Hold calibration button until display shows mode → place weight when prompted | CAL prompt → place weight → stabilise | Max capacity weight |
| Salter (UK models) | Hold ON/OFF for 5 s → unit changes to calibration mode | 0.0 CAL | See manual; typically 100 g |
Can’t find your brand above? The most reliable source for your exact model is the manufacturer’s PDF manual. Search: [your brand] [model number] calibration PDF in Google.
Accuracy tester: is your scale passing?
Once calibration is complete, verify the result. Enter the known weight of your test object and what your scale actually read — the tool below will tell you whether you’re within tolerance and whether recalibration is needed.
Scale accuracy test
Use a known object — a US nickel (5.000 g), a new AA battery (approx. 23–25 g, check the pack), or a sealed standard weight.
[Ad — 728×90 or responsive]
Troubleshooting: when calibration doesn’t fix the problem
Calibration corrects a drifted sensor. It does not fix every scale problem. If your scale still reads incorrectly after a proper calibration, work through this table before buying a replacement.
| Symptom | Most likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Reading drifts upward / downward while object sits still | Draft or air current; vibration from appliances | Move to a sheltered location; place scale on mousepad away from fans, vents, and running appliances |
| Reading jumps around and won’t settle | Electromagnetic interference (EMI) from phone or microwave | Move phone to a different surface; step away from the scale while reading |
Scale shows ERR or O-Ld | Overload — weight exceeds maximum capacity | Remove weight immediately; check scale’s capacity and reduce load. Repeated overloads permanently damage the load cell. |
Scale shows Lo or battery icon | Low battery | Replace batteries before doing anything else. All troubleshooting is meaningless with a dying battery. |
| Scale reads slightly high consistently (e.g., every item is 0.3 g over) | Debris under platform; scale not zeroed before weighing | Clean underneath the platform; press Tare with nothing on the platform before each weighing session |
| Calibration completes but readings still seem wrong | Calibration weight used was inaccurate (worn coins; uncertified weights) | Repeat calibration with known-good weights; use only undamaged, clean coins or certified calibration weights |
| Scale turns on but reads random numbers / won’t zero | Damaged load cell from drop or overload | If the scale was recently dropped, the load cell may be bent. Basic pocket scales typically cost less than a professional repair — replacement is usually the practical choice at this point. |
How often should you calibrate a pocket scale?
There’s no universal answer, but there are clear triggers. Calibrate whenever:
- The scale has been moved to a new location or transported
- It was dropped or knocked significantly
- The batteries were replaced
- Readings seem inconsistent or don’t match expected values
- It hasn’t been used in more than 3 months
For regular use — daily or several times a week — a monthly calibration check is a reasonable baseline. For applications where accuracy is critical (medication dosing, precious metal weighing, laboratory use), calibrate before every session and keep a calibration log. A brief log entry — date, calibration weight used, result — takes 30 seconds and creates a useful audit trail.
Even brand-new scales can arrive out of calibration. The factory calibration is done at the manufacturer’s location and temperature. By the time the scale reaches you, shipping vibration and temperature changes may have shifted it. Always calibrate a new pocket scale before relying on it for anything important.
Frequently asked questions
+
+
+
+
+
+
[Ad — 728×90 or responsive footer banner]