Convert volume units — liters, gallons, cups, milliliters, cubic meters, barrels and more.
| Unit | Name | Value |
|---|---|---|
| 0.001 ml | 2.19969e-07 gal(UK) | |
| 0.01 ml | 2.19969e-06 gal(UK) | |
| 0.1 ml | 2.19969e-05 gal(UK) | |
| 1 ml | 0.000219969 gal(UK) | |
| 5 ml | 0.00109985 gal(UK) | |
| 10 ml | 0.00219969 gal(UK) | |
| 50 ml | 0.0109985 gal(UK) | |
| 100 ml | 0.0219969 gal(UK) | |
| 1000 ml | 0.219969 gal(UK) |
Common milliliter values converted to uk gallon — factor: 1 mL = 0.00022 gal(UK)
| Milliliter (mL) | UK Gallon (gal(UK)) | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 1 mL | 0.00022 gal(UK) | Eyedrop |
| 5 mL | 0.0011 gal(UK) | Teaspoon |
| 10 mL | 0.0022 gal(UK) | Tablespoon |
| 15 mL | 0.0033 gal(UK) | Tablespoon |
| 30 mL | 0.006599 gal(UK) | Shot glass |
| 60 mL | 0.0132 gal(UK) | Double shot |
| 100 mL | 0.022 gal(UK) | Half cup |
| 150 mL | 0.033 gal(UK) | Half cup |
| 240 mL | 0.05279 gal(UK) | One cup |
| 355 mL | 0.07809 gal(UK) | Soda can |
| 500 mL | 0.11 gal(UK) | Water bottle |
| 750 mL | 0.165 gal(UK) | Wine bottle |
| 1,000 mL | 0.22 gal(UK) | One liter |
| 1,500 mL | 0.33 gal(UK) | Large bottle |
| 3,785 mL | 0.8326 gal(UK) | One gallon |
Converting milliliter to uk gallon comes up frequently in cooking, chemistry, medicine, and engineering. A recipe written in metric units may need to be adapted for a kitchen using uk gallon, or a laboratory protocol may specify volumes in milliliter that need to be measured with equipment calibrated in uk gallon.
In everyday use, knowing that 5 mL = 0.0011 gal(UK) and 10 mL = 0.0022 gal(UK) covers most common situations. For bulk calculations, 100 mL = 0.022 gal(UK) is a useful anchor. The reverse conversion — uk gallon back to milliliter — uses the factor 4546, so 1 gal(UK) = 4546 mL.
All conversions use the internationally recognized factor of exactly 1 mL = 0.00022 gal(UK). 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: UK Gallon = Milliliter × 0.00021996925
Multiply any milliliter value by 0.00021996925 to get uk gallon. One milliliter equals 0.00021996925 gal(UK).
Reverse: Milliliter = UK Gallon × 4546.09
1 mL = 0.00021996925 gal(UK). Memorize this for instant mental estimates.
Use 0.00021996925 as a quick mental factor. Multiply your milliliters value by this to estimate UK gallons.
To verify: multiply your result by 4546.09 to recover the original mL value.
Measures liquid medication doses, compound quantities, and vial volumes in milliliters for precise dispensing.
Scales extracts, food colorings, and liquid flavorings in mL for consistent batch replication.
Pipettes reagents, prepares serial dilutions, and calibrates instruments using mL graduations.
Calculates weight-based medication doses converted to mL for syringe administration.
Blends fragrance accords in small mL batches with high precision and high ingredient costs.
Develops skincare products in 50-500 mL batches before scaling to full production.
The milliliter is one-thousandth of a liter, in use since the metric system was codified in France in 1795. The milli- prefix (from Latin mille, thousand) was standardized as part of the original SI prefix system.
Milliliters are the workhorse of medicine and cooking: syringes, dropper bottles, and nutritional labels all rely on mL for precise small-volume measurement. A standard US teaspoon is approximately 4.929 mL.
Interesting fact: The milliliter is numerically identical to the cubic centimeter (cm³), so 1 mL = 1 cm³ exactly. This equivalence is widely used in medicine, where a 5 cc syringe holds exactly 5 mL.
The Imperial gallon was defined by the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824 as the volume of ten pounds of water at 62°F, later fixed to exactly 4.54609 liters in 1985.
UK gallons are still used in Britain for fuel pricing. Road signs show consumption in miles per Imperial gallon, making UK cars appear more fuel-efficient than identical US models.
Interesting fact: 1 Imperial gallon = 1.20095 US gallons. Confusing the two has caused real-world errors in cross-border fuel cost calculations.