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How Many Balloons to Lift a Person or House?

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70 kg person ≈ 8,400 balloons

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

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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!

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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!