🧊 pt to m³ — US Pint to Cubic Meter Converter

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

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 pt = 0.000473176 m³
UnitNameValue
0.001 pt4.73176e-07 m³
0.01 pt4.73176e-06 m³
0.1 pt4.73176e-05 m³
1 pt0.000473176 m³
5 pt0.00236588 m³
10 pt0.00473176 m³
50 pt0.0236588 m³
100 pt0.0473176 m³
1000 pt0.473176 m³
Last updated: March 2026

US Pint to Cubic Meter Conversion Table

Common us pint values converted to cubic meter — factor: 1 pt = 0.0004732 m³

US Pint (pt)Cubic Meter (m³)Context
0.0625 pt2.957e-05 m³Tablespoon
0.125 pt5.915e-05 m³Quarter cup
0.25 pt0.0001183 m³Half cup
0.5 pt0.0002366 m³One cup
1 pt0.0004732 m³Pint glass
2 pt0.0009464 m³One quart
4 pt0.001893 m³Half gallon
8 pt0.003785 m³One gallon
16 pt0.007571 m³2 gallons
32 pt0.01514 m³4 gallons
64 pt0.03028 m³8 gallons
128 pt0.06057 m³16 gallons
256 pt0.1211 m³32 gallons
336 pt0.159 m³One barrel
512 pt0.2423 m³Large drum

About US Pint to Cubic Meter Conversion

Converting us pint 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 us pint that need to be measured with equipment calibrated in cubic meter.

In everyday use, knowing that 5 pt = 0.002366 m³ and 10 pt = 0.004732 m³ covers most common situations. For bulk calculations, 100 pt = 0.04732 m³ is a useful anchor. The reverse conversion — cubic meter back to us pint — uses the factor 2113, so 1 m³ = 2113 pt.

All conversions use the internationally recognized factor of exactly 1 pt = 0.0004732 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 = US Pint × 0.000473176

Multiply any us pint value by 0.000473176 to get cubic meter. One us pint equals 0.000473176 m³.

Reverse: US Pint = Cubic Meter × 2113.3785

Worked Examples

One cubic meter
2113 pt × 0.000473176 = 0.99982089 m³
2,113 US pints = 1 m³.
One US pint
1 pt × 0.000473176 = 0.000473176 m³
1 pt = 0.000473 m³.
One US gallon
8 pt × 0.000473176 = 0.003785408 m³
8 pt = 0.003785 m³ = 1 US gallon.
One US quart
2 pt × 0.000473176 = 0.000946352 m³
2 pt = 0.000946 m³ = 1 US quart.

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 pt = 0.000473176 m³. Memorize this for instant mental estimates.

Rounded shortcut

Use 0.000473176 as a quick mental factor. Multiply your US pints value by this to estimate cubic meters.

Reverse check

To verify: multiply your result by 2113.3785 to recover the original pt value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Bartender

Serves draft beer in pint glasses, the standard US serving at 16 fl oz.

Blood Bank Tech

Collects whole blood donations at roughly one US pint (473 mL) per standard unit.

Farmers Market Vendor

Sells fresh berries and herbs in pint containers, the US standard berry basket.

Ice Cream Shop Owner

Portions premium ice cream into pint containers for take-home sales.

Home Cook

Follows American baking recipes calling for a pint of cream, stock, or buttermilk.

Paramedic

Estimates blood loss in pints as a rapid clinical gauge during emergency response.

Frequently Asked Questions

About US Pint and Cubic Meter

US Pint (pt)

The US liquid pint is one-eighth of a US gallon, exactly 16 fluid ounces or 473.176 mL. Its name comes from Old French pinte. The pint has been a standard tavern measure since at least the 14th century.

Pints remain the defining unit for beer serving sizes in many countries. A US pint is 16 fl oz, while the UK pint is 568 mL. Blood banks measure donations in pints.

Interesting fact: 'A pint's a pound, the world around' is a US mnemonic. A pint of water weighs approximately one pound (actually 1.043 lb).

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.