🚿 gal/h to L/s — Gallon/Hour (US) to Liter/Second Converter

Convert flow rate units — m³/s, L/s, L/min, ft³/s, gallon/min and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 gal/h = 0.001052 L/s
UnitNameValue
m³/s Cubic Meter/Second 0.0000010515
m³/min Cubic Meter/Minute 0.000063088738
m³/h Cubic Meter/Hour 0.0037823741
L/s Liter/Second 0.0010515
L/min Liter/Minute 0.063088738
ft³/s Cubic Foot/Second 0.000037133171
ft³/min Cubic Foot/Minute 0.0022277542
gal/min Gallon/Minute (US) 0.016666667

Quick Answer

Formula: L/s = gal/h × 0.001052

Multiply any gal/h value by 0.001052 to get L/s.

Reverse: gal/h = L/s × 951

Worked Examples

0.001 gal/h
0.001 gal/h × 0.001052 = 1.0515e-6 L/s
Small flow.
0.01 gal/h
0.01 gal/h × 0.001052 = 1.0515e-5 L/s
Medium small flow.
1 gal/h
1 gal/h × 0.001052 = 0.001052 L/s
1 unit reference.
10 gal/h
10 gal/h × 0.001052 = 0.01052 L/s
Large flow.

gal/h to L/s Conversion Table

Common flow rate values — factor: 1 gal/h = 0.001052 L/s

gal/h (gal/h)L/s (L/s)Context
0.1 gal/h0.0001052 L/sDrip
1 gal/h0.001052 L/sSlow drip 1 gal/h
5 gal/h0.005258 L/sDripping faucet
10 gal/h0.01052 L/sFuel consumption
50 gal/h0.05258 L/sWater softener
100 gal/h0.1052 L/sPool fill
500 gal/h0.5258 L/sSmall pump
1000 gal/h1.052 L/sIrrigation
5000 gal/h5.258 L/sCommercial
1e+04 gal/h10.52 L/sLarge system
5e+04 gal/h52.58 L/sIndustrial
1e+05 gal/h105.2 L/sVery large
1e+06 gal/h1052 L/sRiver scale
1e+07 gal/h1.052e+04 L/sLarge river
1e+08 gal/h1.052e+05 L/sMax

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 gal/h = 0.001052 L/s.

Unit chain

m³/s × 1000 = L/s × 60 = L/min. Use this chain for quick conversions.

Reverse

Multiply result by 951 to recover the original gal/h value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Hydraulic Engineer

Designs pumps, pipes, and water distribution systems with flow rates in m³/s, L/s, and GPM.

HVAC Engineer

Specifies air handling units and ductwork in CFM (ft³/min) and m³/h for North American and European projects.

Water Treatment Plant Operator

Monitors and controls treatment processes with flow rates in m³/h, L/s, and MGD.

Fire Protection Engineer

Designs sprinkler systems with required flows in GPM and L/min per NFPA standards.

Hydrologist

Measures river and groundwater flows in m³/s (m) and ft³/s (cfs) for flood modeling and water resource planning.

Medical Equipment Technician

Configures ventilators and oxygen delivery systems with flow rates specified in L/min.

Frequently Asked Questions

About gal/h and L/s

gal/h (gal/h)

Gallons per hour (gal/h) is used for slower flow rates such as fuel consumption, slow drip irrigation, and residential water softeners. One gal/h = 1.0514 × 10⁻⁶ m³/s ≈ 0.0631 L/min.

Vehicle fuel consumption at highway speeds is typically 2–8 gal/h for gasoline engines. Water softeners regenerate at 0.5–2 gal/h. Fuel oil burners for home heating consume 0.7–3 gal/h depending on output.

Interesting fact: A dripping faucet (one drip per second) wastes about 3,000 gallons per year — roughly 0.34 gal/h. A running toilet can waste 200 gal/h, adding up to nearly 2 million gallons over a year if unrepaired.

L/s (L/s)

Liters per second (L/s) is widely used in water supply engineering, fire protection, and irrigation where liter-scale flows are practical. One L/s = 0.001 m³/s = 60 L/min.

Fire hoses typically deliver 7–25 L/s. Municipal water distribution systems are designed for flows in L/s. Swimming pool filtration systems run at 1–10 L/s. A garden hose delivers about 0.3 L/s.

Interesting fact: The human heart pumps about 0.083 L/s (5 L/min) at rest, rising to 0.333–0.5 L/s (20–30 L/min) during intense exercise. Over a lifetime, the heart pumps approximately 200 million liters of blood.

About gal/h to L/s Conversion

Converting gal/h to L/s is essential across hydraulic engineering, HVAC, water treatment, fire protection, and medicine. SI units (m³/s, L/s) are standard in science; European engineering uses m³/h; US systems use GPM and CFM; medical applications use L/min.

Quick reference: 10 gal/h = 0.01052 L/s. Reverse: 1 L/s = 951 gal/h. Factor: 1 gal/h = 0.001052 L/s.

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