Roman Numeral Converter

This Roman numeral converter instantly translates between Arabic numbers and Roman numerals. Convert numbers (1–3,999) to Roman numerals, decode Roman numerals back to numbers, or translate any date into Roman numeral format — perfect for tattoos, engravings, and special occasions.

Roman Numeral Converter

Convert between numbers and Roman numerals, or translate dates into Roman numeral format

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the 7 Roman numeral symbols?

The seven Roman numeral symbols are I (1), V (5), X (10), L (50), C (100), D (500), and M (1000). All Roman numerals are formed by combining these seven symbols using addition and subtraction rules. For example, VI = 6 (5+1), IV = 4 (5-1), and MCMLXXXIV = 1984.

How do you convert numbers to Roman numerals?

To convert a number to Roman numerals: (1) Find the largest Roman numeral value that fits into the number, (2) Write down that symbol, (3) Subtract its value from the number, (4) Repeat until the number reaches zero. For example, 1984: subtract M(1000) leaving 984, subtract CM(900) leaving 84, subtract L(50) leaving 34, subtract XXX(30) leaving 4, write IV(4). Result: MCMLXXXIV.

How do you read Roman numerals?

Read Roman numerals from left to right. If a smaller value appears before a larger value, subtract it (e.g., IV = 5-1 = 4). Otherwise, add the values together (e.g., VI = 5+1 = 6). For MCMXCIV: M=1000, CM=900, XC=90, IV=4, so 1000+900+90+4 = 1994.

What is 4 in Roman numerals?

4 in Roman numerals is IV. This uses the subtraction principle: I (1) placed before V (5) means 5 minus 1 = 4. Writing IIII is considered non-standard, though some clock faces use it for aesthetic reasons. The subtraction principle also applies to 9 (IX), 40 (XL), 90 (XC), 400 (CD), and 900 (CM).

How do you write a date in Roman numerals?

Write each part of the date (month, day, year) as a separate Roman numeral, typically separated by a middle dot or dash. For example, March 19, 2026 becomes III · XIX · MMXXVI (month 3 · day 19 · year 2026). This format is popular for tattoos, engravings, and commemorative inscriptions.

What is 2026 in Roman numerals?

2026 in Roman numerals is MMXXVI. The breakdown is: MM = 2000 (two thousands), XX = 20 (two tens), VI = 6 (five plus one). So MM + XX + VI = MMXXVI = 2026.

What is the largest Roman numeral?

In the standard system, the largest Roman numeral is M (1000), and the largest representable number is 3999 (MMMCMXCIX). Numbers above 3999 historically used a vinculum — a bar placed over a numeral to multiply its value by 1000. For example, V with a bar over it equals 5000. Our converter handles the standard range of 1 to 3999.

How do you add Roman numerals?

To add Roman numerals, first convert each to a decimal number, add the decimal values, then convert the sum back to Roman numerals. For example, XIV + IX: convert to 14 + 9 = 23, then convert 23 to XXIII. There is no direct method for adding Roman numerals without converting to decimal first, which is one reason Arabic numerals replaced them for mathematics.

What are the rules for writing Roman numerals?

The five main rules are: (1) Symbols are generally written largest to smallest left to right. (2) I, X, C, M can repeat up to 3 times. (3) V, L, D never repeat. (4) Only six subtractive pairs are allowed: IV(4), IX(9), XL(40), XC(90), CD(400), CM(900). (5) A smaller value before a larger means subtraction; otherwise values are added.

How do you convert Roman numerals to numbers?

Scan from left to right. For each symbol, if the next symbol has a greater value, subtract the current value; otherwise, add it. For example, XLII: X(10) is less than L(50), so subtract 10; L(50) is greater than I(1), so add 50; I(1) + I(1) add both. Total: -10 + 50 + 1 + 1 = 42.

Why are Roman numerals still used today?

Roman numerals remain popular for tradition, formality, and aesthetics. They appear on clock faces, Super Bowl numbering (e.g., Super Bowl LVIII), movie sequels (Star Wars Episode IV), building cornerstones, papal names (Pope Benedict XVI), book chapters, copyright dates in film credits, and commemorative tattoos. They convey a sense of permanence and classical elegance.

How do you write your birthday in Roman numerals?

Convert your birth month, day, and year each to Roman numerals and separate them with dots or dashes. For example, July 4, 1776 becomes VII · IV · MDCCLXXVI. February 14, 2000 becomes II · XIV · MM. Use our date converter tab above to instantly convert any date to Roman numerals — it is especially useful for tattoo designs and engravings.

Roman Numeral Rules

Roman numerals use seven symbols to represent numbers. Understanding these symbols and the rules for combining them is essential for reading and writing Roman numerals correctly.

The 7 Basic Symbols

SymbolValueOrigin
I1One finger
V5Open hand (V-shape)
X10Two crossed hands
L50Half of C (rotated)
C100Centum (Latin for 100)
D500Half of M (halved)
M1,000Mille (Latin for 1000)

5 Writing Rules

Rule 1: Addition Principle

When a symbol of equal or greater value follows another, add their values. Example: VI = 5 + 1 = 6, XV = 10 + 5 = 15.

Rule 2: Subtraction Principle

When a smaller symbol appears before a larger one, subtract the smaller from the larger. Only six subtractive pairs are valid: IV (4), IX (9), XL (40), XC (90), CD (400), CM (900).

Rule 3: Repetition Limit

I, X, C, and M may be repeated up to 3 times in succession. Example: III = 3, XXX = 30. But IIII is invalid; use IV = 4 instead.

Rule 4: No Repetition of V, L, D

The symbols V (5), L (50), and D (500) can never be repeated. VV is wrong; use X = 10 instead. LL is wrong; use C = 100 instead.

Rule 5: Largest to Smallest (Left to Right)

Roman numerals are written from the largest value on the left to the smallest on the right, except when using the subtraction principle. Example: MCMLXXXIV = 1984 (M=1000, CM=900, LXXX=80, IV=4).

How to Convert Number to Roman Numeral

Follow these steps to convert any number between 1 and 3,999 to its Roman numeral equivalent.

Step 1: Know the reference values

Memorize the 13 key values: M(1000), CM(900), D(500), CD(400), C(100), XC(90), L(50), XL(40), X(10), IX(9), V(5), IV(4), I(1).

Step 2: Find the largest value that fits

Starting from the largest (M=1000), find the biggest value that does not exceed your number.

Step 3: Write the symbol and subtract

Write down that Roman numeral symbol and subtract its value from your number.

Step 4: Repeat until zero

Continue finding the largest fitting value, writing it down, and subtracting until the remaining number is 0.

Example: Convert 1984 to Roman Numerals

1. 1984 ≥ 1000 → write M, remaining: 984

2. 984 ≥ 900 → write CM, remaining: 84

3. 84 ≥ 50 → write L, remaining: 34

4. 34 ≥ 10 → write X, remaining: 24

5. 24 ≥ 10 → write X, remaining: 14

6. 14 ≥ 10 → write X, remaining: 4

7. 4 ≥ 4 → write IV, remaining: 0

Result: 1984 = MCMLXXXIV

How to Convert Roman Numeral to Number

To read a Roman numeral, scan from left to right and apply the addition and subtraction principles.

Step 1: Start from the left

Look at each symbol from left to right.

Step 2: Compare consecutive symbols

If the current symbol is smaller than the next one, subtract it. Otherwise, add it.

Step 3: Sum all values

Keep a running total until you reach the end of the Roman numeral string.

Example: Convert MCMXCIV to a Number

1. M = 1000 (add, because M ≥ C)

2. C = 100 (subtract, because C < M next) → −100

3. M = 1000 (add) → +1000

4. X = 10 (subtract, because X < C next) → −10

5. C = 100 (add) → +100

6. I = 1 (subtract, because I < V next) → −1

7. V = 5 (add, last symbol) → +5

Total: 1000 − 100 + 1000 − 10 + 100 − 1 + 5 = 1994

Roman Numerals Chart 1–100

This reference table shows every Roman numeral from 1 to 100. The first 20 values are shown by default; expand to see all 100.

NumberRomanNumberRomanNumberRomanNumberRoman
1I6VI11XI16XVI
2II7VII12XII17XVII
3III8VIII13XIII18XVIII
4IV9IX14XIV19XIX
5V10X15XV20XX

Common Year Conversions

Here are the Roman numeral representations for recent and notable years:

YearRoman Numeral
2020MMXX
2021MMXXI
2022MMXXII
2023MMXXIII
2024MMXXIV
2025MMXXV
2026MMXXVI
2027MMXXVII
2028MMXXVIII
2029MMXXIX
2030MMXXX

Where Roman Numerals Are Used Today

  • Clock and watch faces — Traditional analog clocks use Roman numerals for the hour markers (I through XII), with IIII sometimes used instead of IV for aesthetic balance.
  • Super Bowl numbering — The NFL names each Super Bowl with Roman numerals (e.g., Super Bowl LVIII = 58). This tradition started with Super Bowl V in 1971.
  • Movie sequels and series — Film franchises often use Roman numerals for sequels: Rocky II, Star Wars Episode IV, The Godfather Part III.
  • Building cornerstones and monuments — Dates carved in stone on buildings, memorials, and institutions are traditionally written in Roman numerals (e.g., MCMXLV = 1945).
  • Papal names — Popes use Roman numerals to distinguish themselves from predecessors with the same name: Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope Francis (I).
  • Book chapters and outlines — Roman numerals are used for major divisions, front matter page numbers, and formal outlines (I, II, III...).
  • Tattoos and jewelry — Dates in Roman numerals are popular choices for commemorative tattoos and engraved jewelry, especially birth dates, wedding dates, and anniversaries.
  • Copyright dates — Film and television credits sometimes display the copyright year in Roman numerals (e.g., MMXXVI for productions in 2026).

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For a deep dive into Roman numeral history and complete reference charts, read our comprehensive guide: Roman Numerals Chart: Complete List from 1 to 1000 with Rules.