🧱 kg/L to kg/m³ — Kilogram/Liter to Kilogram/Cubic Meter Converter

Convert density units — kg/m³, g/cm³, lb/ft³, lb/in³ and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 kg/L = 1000 kg/m³
UnitNameValue
kg/m³ Kilogram/Cubic Meter 1000
g/cm³ Gram/Cubic Centimeter 1
lb/ft³ Pound/Cubic Foot 62.427818
lb/in³ Pound/Cubic Inch 0.036127298
oz/in³ Ounce/Cubic Inch 0.57803802
t/m³ Tonne/Cubic Meter 1

Quick Answer

Formula: kg/m³ = kg/L × 1000

Multiply any kg/L value by 1000 to get kg/m³.

Reverse: kg/L = kg/m³ × 0.001

Worked Examples

Water
1 kg/L × 1000 = 1000 kg/m³
1 kg/L = 1,000 kg/m³ — water.
Diesel
0.85 kg/L × 1000 = 850 kg/m³
0.85 kg/L = 850 kg/m³ — diesel fuel.
Petrol
0.73 kg/L × 1000 = 730 kg/m³
0.73 kg/L = 730 kg/m³ — petrol.
Seawater
1.025 kg/L × 1000 = 1025 kg/m³
1.025 kg/L = 1,025 kg/m³.

kg/L to kg/m³ Conversion Table

Common materials — factor: 1 kg/L = 1000 kg/m³

kg/L (kg/L)kg/m³ (kg/m³)Material
0.0001 kg/L0.1 kg/m³Gas
0.001 kg/L1 kg/m³Light gas
0.01 kg/L10 kg/m³Light foam
0.1 kg/L100 kg/m³Aerogel
0.7 kg/L700 kg/m³Petrol
0.8 kg/L800 kg/m³Ethanol
0.85 kg/L850 kg/m³Diesel
0.917 kg/L917 kg/m³Ice
1 kg/L1000 kg/m³Water
1.025 kg/L1025 kg/m³Seawater
1.36 kg/L1360 kg/m³Honey
2.7 kg/L2700 kg/m³Aluminum
7.85 kg/L7850 kg/m³Steel
11.34 kg/L1.134e+04 kg/m³Lead
19.3 kg/L1.93e+04 kg/m³Gold

Mental Math Tricks

× 1000 exactly

kg/L × 1,000 = kg/m³.

Key anchor

1 kg/L = 1,000 kg/m³. 0.85 kg/L (diesel) = 850 kg/m³.

Reverse

kg/m³ ÷ 1,000 = kg/L.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Materials Engineer

Compares material densities to optimize weight-to-strength ratios in product design.

Civil/Structural Engineer

Calculates dead loads from material densities for structural design in kg/m³ and lb/ft³.

Aerospace Engineer

Selects lightweight materials (aluminum, titanium, composites) based on density in g/cm³ or lb/in³.

Petroleum Engineer

Measures crude oil and drilling fluid density in kg/m³ or lb/ft³ for reservoir engineering.

Geotechnical Engineer

Measures soil and rock bulk density in t/m³ for foundation and slope stability analysis.

Chemical Engineer

Uses density in g/cm³ for solution concentration, specific gravity, and process design calculations.

Frequently Asked Questions

About kg/L and kg/m³

kg/L (kg/L)

Kilograms per liter (kg/L) is numerically identical to g/cm³ and 1,000 kg/m³. It is widely used in the fuel industry — diesel density is about 0.82–0.85 kg/L, petrol 0.71–0.77 kg/L — and in the food and beverage industry.

Fuel efficiency calculations require density in kg/L to convert between volume (liters sold) and mass (kilograms of fuel burned). Honey density is about 1.36 kg/L; olive oil 0.91 kg/L; seawater 1.025 kg/L.

Interesting fact: Liquid hydrogen, the most energy-dense rocket fuel by mass, has a density of only 0.071 kg/L — about 14 times less dense than water, requiring enormous tanks despite its high energy content.

kg/m³ (kg/m³)

Kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m³) is the SI unit of density, defined as the mass in kilograms contained in one cubic meter of a substance. It became the international standard with the adoption of the SI system in 1960.

Most physical and engineering tables express density in kg/m³: water = 1,000 kg/m³, air = 1.225 kg/m³, steel = 7,850 kg/m³, gold = 19,300 kg/m³. The kg/m³ is the base unit for Archimedes' buoyancy calculations and fluid dynamics.

Interesting fact: The density of the Sun's core is about 150,000 kg/m³ — 150 times denser than water. Osmium, the densest naturally occurring element, has a density of 22,590 kg/m³, nearly twice that of lead.

About kg/L to kg/m³ Conversion

Converting kg/L to kg/m³ is common in materials science, engineering, and manufacturing. SI units (kg/m³, g/cm³) are standard in scientific and metric engineering contexts, while Imperial units (lb/ft³, lb/in³) are used in US construction and aerospace. Water at 4°C = 1 kg/L = 1000 kg/m³ — a universal anchor for density comparisons.

Exact factor: 1 kg/L = 1000 kg/m³. Reverse: 1 kg/m³ = 0.001 kg/L.

All conversions use IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, accurate to at least 8 significant figures.