🚿 m³/h to ft³/s — Cubic Meter/Hour to Cubic Foot/Second Converter

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

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 m³/h = 0.00981 ft³/s
UnitNameValue
m³/s Cubic Meter/Second 0.000278
m³/min Cubic Meter/Minute 0.016679666
L/s Liter/Second 0.278
L/min Liter/Minute 16.679666
ft³/s Cubic Foot/Second 0.0098174242
ft³/min Cubic Foot/Minute 0.58898305
gal/min Gallon/Minute (US) 4.4064036
gal/h Gallon/Hour (US) 264.38421

Quick Answer

Formula: ft³/s = m³/h × 0.00981

Multiply any m³/h value by 0.00981 to get ft³/s.

Reverse: m³/h = ft³/s × 101.9

Worked Examples

0.001 m³/h
0.001 m³/h × 0.00981 = 9.8096e-6 ft³/s
Small flow.
0.01 m³/h
0.01 m³/h × 0.00981 = 9.8096e-5 ft³/s
Medium small flow.
1 m³/h
1 m³/h × 0.00981 = 0.00981 ft³/s
1 unit reference.
10 m³/h
10 m³/h × 0.00981 = 0.0981 ft³/s
Large flow.

m³/h to ft³/s Conversion Table

Common flow rate values — factor: 1 m³/h = 0.00981 ft³/s

m³/h (m³/h)ft³/s (ft³/s)Context
0.001 m³/h9.810e-06 ft³/sVery small
0.01 m³/h9.810e-05 ft³/s1 L/min
0.1 m³/h0.000981 ft³/s100 L/min
1 m³/h0.00981 ft³/s~0.28 L/s
10 m³/h0.0981 ft³/sSmall pump
100 m³/h0.981 ft³/sIndustrial pump
500 m³/h4.905 ft³/sLarge HVAC
1000 m³/h9.81 ft³/sLarge system
5000 m³/h49.05 ft³/sLarge plant
1e+04 m³/h98.1 ft³/sMunicipal supply
3.6e+04 m³/h353.1 ft³/s10 m³/s
1e+05 m³/h981 ft³/sRiver
1e+06 m³/h9810 ft³/sLarge river
1e+07 m³/h9.81e+04 ft³/sVery large
1.000e+09 m³/h9.81e+06 ft³/sAmazon

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 m³/h = 0.00981 ft³/s.

Unit chain

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

Reverse

Multiply result by 101.9 to recover the original m³/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 m³/h and ft³/s

m³/h (m³/h)

Cubic meters per hour (m³/h) is the standard flow unit in European industrial and HVAC specifications, water treatment, and utility metering. It is the most practical scale for many industrial processes.

Water meters in Europe display consumption in m³, and flow rates in municipal water systems are specified in m³/h. A typical home consumes 1–5 m³/h peak demand; a large industrial facility might use 1,000–10,000 m³/h.

Interesting fact: Global freshwater withdrawal for agriculture, industry, and municipal use is approximately 4,600 km³/year — about 524,000 m³/h per billion people — making water flow measurement one of the most economically important metrological applications.

ft³/s (ft³/s)

Cubic feet per second (ft³/s), also called cusecs, is the standard volumetric flow unit for rivers and streams in the United States. One ft³/s = 0.028317 m³/s ≈ 28.32 L/s.

US Geological Survey (USGS) stream gauges report flow in ft³/s (cfs). Irrigation water rights, hydropower licensing, and environmental flow requirements in the US are expressed in cfs. The Colorado River at Hoover Dam averages about 7,500 cfs.

Interesting fact: During Hurricane Harvey (2017), some Houston streams exceeded 400,000 cfs — more than 10 times the normal peak flow. The USGS maintains over 8,000 stream gauges across the US, all reporting in cfs.

About m³/h to ft³/s Conversion

Converting m³/h to ft³/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 m³/h = 0.0981 ft³/s. Reverse: 1 ft³/s = 101.9 m³/h. Factor: 1 m³/h = 0.00981 ft³/s.

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