On the other end of the scale, Chris Harris has the lowest conversion rate of 5.8 per cent with one century and 16 fifties, however 10 of his half-centuries were not out due to the fact he usually batted lower down the order.
The most fifties without a hundred is held by Andrew Jones who passed 50 25 times - his highest score was 93 against Bangladesh. Former teammate John Wright has the lowest career conversion for New Zealand players with one century and 24 fifties giving him a conversion rate of 4 per cent.
Speaking to the Radio Sport Breakfast this morning, Taylor admitted he wasn't aware he had the leading conversion rate.
"At four you've got to bat the situation, I guess like the other positions, but there are so many different scenarios if you're chasing or setting a total to take the game deep," Taylor said.
Listen: Ross Taylor on the Radio Sport Breakfast
"As we know with our New Zealand boundaries, if we can keep wickets in hand you can catch up in those last 10 overs and if you can still be batting in the end then more often than not you'll be close to a hundred."
Taylor said reaching the 17 century mark has been a goal of his and looking ahead his next challenge is to play at a fourth Cricket World Cup.
"It was definitely a goal. I've got to reassess. One of my major goals is to trying to get to the 2019 World Cup and hopefully go one step further than we did in 2015 but there's still a lot of cricket to be played before then and form and age and all that type of stuff."
The 17th century wasn't Taylor's only milestone reached in yesterday's victory. He also became the fourth New Zealander to reach 6000 ODI runs and now sits only 32 runs shy of passing third-placed Brendon McCullum.
Even more impressive he became just the sixth international player to score a century against every major cricketing nation, joining Ricky Ponting, Herschelle Gibbs, Sachin Tendulkar, Hashim Amla and Virat Kohli.
Conversion rates of scores past 50 turned in hundreds
Ross Taylor 34.6% (17 100s, 32 50s)
Nathan Astle 28% (16 100s, 41 50s)
Martin Guptill 26% (11 100s, 32 50s)
Kane Williamson 21.6% (8 100s, 29 50s)
Brendon McCullum 13.5% (5 100s, 32 50s)
Stephen Fleming 14% (8 100s, 49 50s)
Chris Cairns 13.7% (4 100s, 25 50s)
Scott Styris 12.5% (4 100s, 28 50s)
Martin Crowe 10.5% (4 100s, 34 50s)
Craig McMillan 9.6% (3 100s, 28 50s)
Chris Harris 5.8% (1 100, 16 50s)
*New Zealand players to score more than 4000 runs
** Clarification: An earlier version wrongly calculated the conversion rates mentioned throughout the article.