Convert cups to quarts and quarts to cups for US and imperial systems. Shows pints, gallons, fluid ounces, liters, and a US volume ladder chart.
Four US cups equal one US quart, which makes this a common conversion for soups, stock, drinks, milk, and recipe scaling. It also helps when you are planning batch cooking or checking whether a container will actually hold the full recipe volume. It is especially helpful when ingredients are measured in cups but pots, cartons, or containers are labeled in quarts.
This converter supports both US and imperial systems and also shows pints, gallons, fluid ounces, milliliters, liters, and tablespoons. That gives you the direct quart answer plus the nearby units you are likely to need next. That gives you the direct quart answer plus the nearby units you are likely to need next.
Use it when you want to move between cup-sized measurements and quart-sized containers without mixing US and imperial units. It is especially helpful when scaling a recipe for a pot, pitcher, or storage container. That extra check helps keep batch sizes aligned with the vessel you are actually using.
Recipe scaling and container sizing often switch between cups and quarts mid-task. This page handles that conversion directly and keeps the surrounding units visible so you can keep working without extra lookups. This page handles that conversion directly and keeps the surrounding units visible so you can keep working without extra lookups.
US: quarts = cups ÷ 4 | cups = quarts × 4 1 US quart = 946.353 mL | 1 Imperial quart = 1,136.52 mL
Result: 2.5 US quarts
10 US cups ÷ 4 = 2.5 quarts. That equals 5 pints, 80 fluid ounces, or about 2.366 liters.
The word "quart" derives from the Latin "quartus" (fourth), reflecting that it is one quarter of a gallon. In the US, liquid quarts are used for milk, juice, motor oil, paint, and cooking. Dry quarts are used at farmer's markets for berries and produce. Knowing which quart a recipe or label refers to prevents costly mistakes.
A US liquid quart holds 946.353 mL, while an imperial quart holds 1,136.52 mL—about 20 % more. This means a recipe calling for "2 quarts of stock" in a British cookbook requires 2,273 mL, not the 1,893 mL an American cook would pour. Always check the cookbook's origin before converting.
Memorize this chain: 4 tbsp = ¼ cup → 8 fl oz = 1 cup → 2 cups = 1 pint → 2 pints = 1 quart → 4 quarts = 1 gallon. Every step doubles (except the gallon, which quadruples from a quart). With this ladder, you can move between any two units in seconds.
4 US cups = 1 US quart. In imperial units, 1 imperial quart ≈ 4 imperial cups (1,136.52 mL).
4 quarts = 1 gallon in both US and imperial systems. That makes quart-to-gallon scaling easy once the gallon type is known.
Close but not identical. 1 US quart = 946.353 mL while 1 liter = 1,000 mL—about 5.7 % difference.
A US dry quart equals 1,101.22 mL and is used to measure commodities like berries. It is about 16% larger than a liquid quart.
2 pints = 1 quart in both US and imperial systems. The pint size changes by system, but the step relationship stays the same.
Multiply US cups by 0.236588 (mL per cup ÷ 1,000). For example, 4 cups × 0.2366 ≈ 0.946 L.