Convert volume units — liters, gallons, cups, milliliters, cubic meters, pints, quarts.
| Unit | Name | Value |
|---|---|---|
| L | Liter | 0.236588 |
| mL | Milliliter | 236.588 |
| m³ | Cubic Meter | 0.000236588 |
| gal(US) | US Gallon | 0.062499967 |
| gal(UK) | UK Gallon | 0.052042085 |
| qt | US Quart | 0.24999974 |
| pt | US Pint | 0.5 |
| fl oz | Fluid Ounce | 8 |
Common us cup values converted to square meter — factor: 1 cup = 236.6 m²
| US Cup (cup) | Square Meter (m²) | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 0.0625 cup | 14.79 m² | Tablespoon |
| 0.125 cup | 29.57 m² | Eighth cup |
| 0.25 cup | 59.15 m² | Quarter cup |
| 0.333 cup | 78.78 m² | Third cup |
| 0.5 cup | 118.3 m² | Half cup |
| 1 cup | 236.6 m² | One cup |
| 2 cup | 473.2 m² | One pint |
| 4 cup | 946.4 m² | One quart |
| 8 cup | 1,893 m² | Half gallon |
| 16 cup | 3,785 m² | One gallon |
| 32 cup | 7,571 m² | 2 gallons |
| 64 cup | 1.514e+04 m² | 4 gallons |
| 128 cup | 3.028e+04 m² | 8 gallons |
| 256 cup | 6.057e+04 m² | Large drum |
| 512 cup | 1.211e+05 m² | Large drum |
Converting us cup to square meter comes up frequently in cooking, chemistry, medicine, and engineering. A recipe written in metric units may need to be adapted for a kitchen using square meter, or a laboratory protocol may specify volumes in us cup that need to be measured with equipment calibrated in square meter.
In everyday use, knowing that 5 cup = 1183 m² and 10 cup = 2366 m² covers most common situations. For bulk calculations, 100 cup = 2.366e+04 m² is a useful anchor. The reverse conversion — square meter back to us cup — uses the factor 0.004227, so 1 m² = 0.004227 cup.
All conversions use the internationally recognized factor of exactly 1 cup = 236.6 m². Calculations are performed in IEEE 754 double-precision floating point, giving accuracy to at least 8 significant figures — more than sufficient for any practical application.
Formula: Cubic Meter = US Cup × 0.000236588
Multiply any us cup value by 0.000236588 to get cubic meter. One us cup equals 0.000236588 m³.
Reverse: US Cup = Cubic Meter × 4226.7571
1 cup = 0.000236588 m³. Memorize this for instant mental estimates.
Use 0.000236588 as a quick mental factor. Multiply your US cups value by this to estimate cubic meters.
To verify: multiply your result by 4226.7571 to recover the original cup value.
Follows American recipes using cups for flour, sugar, milk, and butter.
Tests and standardizes recipes in cup measurements before international publication.
Uses cup portions as standardized serving-size references for dietary counseling.
Teaches beginner cooks using cups as intuitive, equipment-free measuring tools.
Converts cup-based recipes to liter or kilogram quantities for industrial production.
Converts US cup measurements to metric mL when cooking American recipes abroad.
The US customary cup is defined as exactly 8 US fluid ounces, or 236.588 mL. It was standardized by Fannie Farmer in her 1896 cookbook The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book.
The cup is the backbone of US baking: nearly every American recipe uses cup measurements for flour, sugar, butter, and liquids. Standard sets include 1 cup, ½ cup, ⅓ cup, and ¼ cup.
Interesting fact: Australia uses a metric cup of 250 mL, slightly larger than the US cup, which can cause recipe confusion in international cooking.
The cubic meter is the SI derived unit of volume, formally defined in 1960 at the 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures. It equals 1,000 liters or 1,000,000 milliliters.
Cubic meters are standard for large-scale volumes: natural gas is sold in m³, swimming pools are measured in m³, and bulk shipping containers are rated by cubic meter capacity.
Interesting fact: One cubic meter of water at 4°C weighs exactly 1,000 kg. The Pacific Ocean contains roughly 7.1 × 10²⁰ cubic meters of water.