How Many Balloons to Lift a Person or House?
How many helium balloons does it take to lift a person, a pet, or a whole house like Carl's in Pixar's "Up"? This calculator works it out from real physics: an 11-inch latex helium balloon provides about 12 grams of gross lift, minus the weight of the balloon and string. A 70 kg person needs roughly 8,400 balloons, while lifting a house would take around 65 million. Enter the weight you want to lift to find how many helium balloons it takes.
Reviewed by the SparkCalc editorial team
How We Calculate This
Net lift per balloon = gross lift - balloon/string weight. Required lift = payload × (1 + safety margin). Balloons needed = required lift ÷ net lift per balloon, rounded up.
Sources: NASA Glenn Research Center — Buoyancy: Archimedes Principle · Union University, Department of Physics — How Many Helium Balloons Would It Take to Lift Me?
Frequently Asked Questions
How many helium balloons does it take to lift a person?
An average 70 kg (154 lb) adult needs roughly 8,400 standard 11-inch helium balloons, since each balloon nets only about 10 grams of lift after subtracting the balloon and string. Heavier people need proportionally more - a 90 kg person needs around 10,800 balloons.
How many balloons lifted the house in "Up"?
According to calculations by Movoto and reported by Gizmodo, lifting a house like Carl's would require approximately 64,705,000 balloons. The movie shows far fewer for artistic reasons!
Why is the net lift only 10 grams per balloon?
A standard 11" helium balloon provides about 12 grams of gross lift, but the balloon material and string weigh approximately 2 grams. The net lift is the difference: 12g - 2g = 10g of actual lifting force.
What is the safety margin for?
The safety margin adds extra balloons to account for balloons that might deflate, pop, or have less-than-perfect inflation. A 20% margin means you get 20% more balloons than the absolute minimum needed.
Could this actually work in real life?
Theoretically yes, but practically no. The cluster of balloons would be enormous, wind would be a major problem, and you'd need a way to control descent. Plus, helium is a limited resource - please don't actually try this!
Related Calculators
You might also find these calculators helpful: Weight Converter, and Ant Army Lift Calculator.
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This calculator is for entertainment purposes only. Do not attempt to lift people, animals, or property with helium balloons. Helium is a non-renewable resource - use responsibly!