🧊 ml to m³ — Milliliter to Cubic Meter Converter

Convert volume units — liters, gallons, cups, milliliters, cubic meters, barrels and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 mL = 1.0000e-6 m³
UnitNameValue
0.001 ml1e-09 m³
0.01 ml1e-08 m³
0.1 ml1e-07 m³
1 ml1e-06 m³
5 ml5e-06 m³
10 ml1e-05 m³
50 ml5e-05 m³
100 ml0.0001 m³
1000 ml0.001 m³
Last updated: March 2026

Milliliter to Cubic Meter Conversion Table

Common milliliter values converted to cubic meter — factor: 1 mL = 1.0000e-6 m³

Milliliter (mL)Cubic Meter (m³)Context
1 mL1.000e-06 m³Eyedrop
5 mL5.000e-06 m³Teaspoon
10 mL1.000e-05 m³Tablespoon
15 mL1.500e-05 m³Tablespoon
30 mL3.000e-05 m³Shot glass
60 mL6.000e-05 m³Double shot
100 mL0.0001 m³Half cup
150 mL0.00015 m³Half cup
240 mL0.00024 m³One cup
355 mL0.000355 m³Soda can
500 mL0.0005 m³Water bottle
750 mL0.00075 m³Wine bottle
1,000 mL0.001 m³One liter
1,500 mL0.0015 m³Large bottle
3,785 mL0.003785 m³One gallon

About Milliliter to Cubic Meter Conversion

Converting milliliter to cubic 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 cubic meter, or a laboratory protocol may specify volumes in milliliter that need to be measured with equipment calibrated in cubic meter.

In everyday use, knowing that 5 mL = 5.0000e-6 m³ and 10 mL = 1.0000e-5 m³ covers most common situations. For bulk calculations, 100 mL = 1.0000e-4 m³ is a useful anchor. The reverse conversion — cubic meter back to milliliter — uses the factor 1e+06, so 1 m³ = 1e+06 mL.

All conversions use the internationally recognized factor of exactly 1 mL = 1.0000e-6 m³. 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.

Quick Answer

Formula: Cubic Meter = Milliliter × 1.0000e-6

Multiply any milliliter value by 1.0000e-6 to get cubic meter. One milliliter equals 1.0000e-6 m³.

Reverse: Milliliter = Cubic Meter × 1e+06

Worked Examples

One milliliter
1 mL × 1.0000e-6 = 1.0000e-6 m³
1 mL = 0.000001 m³ — 1 millionth of a cubic meter.
One liter
1000 mL × 1.0000e-6 = 0.001 m³
1,000 mL = 0.001 m³ — one liter.
One cubic meter
1e+06 mL × 1.0000e-6 = 1 m³
1,000,000 mL = 1 m³ — a cubic meter of water weighs exactly 1 tonne.
Half liter
500 mL × 1.0000e-6 = 0.0005 m³
500 mL = 0.0005 m³ — standard water bottle volume.

Mental Math Tricks

÷ 1,000,000

mL ÷ 1,000,000 = m³. Move decimal 6 places left.

1 L = 0.001 m³

1000 mL = 0.001 m³. Think in liters first, then divide by 1000.

Reverse

m³ × 1,000,000 = mL.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Pharmacist

Measures liquid medication doses, compound quantities, and vial volumes in milliliters for precise dispensing.

Pastry Chef

Scales extracts, food colorings, and liquid flavorings in mL for consistent batch replication.

Lab Technician

Pipettes reagents, prepares serial dilutions, and calibrates instruments using mL graduations.

Pediatric Nurse

Calculates weight-based medication doses converted to mL for syringe administration.

Perfumer

Blends fragrance accords in small mL batches with high precision and high ingredient costs.

Cosmetic Formulator

Develops skincare products in 50-500 mL batches before scaling to full production.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Milliliter and Cubic Meter

Milliliter (mL)

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.

Cubic Meter (m³)

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.