Convert between US liquid, imperial, and dry gallons. Shows liters, quarts, pints, cups, fluid ounces, and cubic feet with a gallon-type comparison chart.
Not all gallons are the same. A US liquid gallon is 3,785.41 mL, an imperial gallon is 4,546.09 mL, and the less common US dry gallon is 4,404.88 mL. Using the wrong one can create a meaningful error in recipes, fuel estimates, or bulk purchasing.
This converter shows the three gallon definitions side by side and also converts to liters, quarts, pints, cups, fluid ounces, cubic feet, and cubic inches. The comparison bar makes the size difference visible instead of leaving it buried in decimal values. The comparison bar makes the size difference visible instead of leaving it buried in decimal values.
Use it when you need to move between gallon types or compare gallon sizes against common containers. That extra check is useful before buying, mixing, or shipping anything in bulk. It keeps the gallon standard explicit so a recipe, fuel spec, or product label does not get misread at the last step.
Gallons are not a single global unit. This page keeps the US liquid, imperial, and dry definitions visible together so the wrong gallon type does not slip into your calculation. This page keeps the US liquid, imperial, and dry definitions visible together so the wrong gallon type does not slip into your calculation.
1 US liquid gal = 3,785.41 mL = 128 fl oz 1 Imperial gal = 4,546.09 mL = 160 imp fl oz 1 US dry gal = 4,404.88 mL Convert between types via mL.
Result: 4.163 Imperial gal / 4.299 Dry gal / 18.927 L
5 US liquid gal × 3,785.41 = 18,927 mL. Divide by 4,546.09 = 4.163 imperial gal; divide by 4,404.88 = 4.299 dry gal.
The US liquid gallon is defined as exactly 231 cubic inches (3,785.41 mL). The imperial gallon was redefined in 1824 as the volume of 10 pounds of water at 62 °F, yielding 4,546.09 mL. The US dry gallon equals ⅛ of a Winchester bushel (2,150.42 cubic inches), giving 4,404.88 mL. Each arose from a different historical standard, and none has ever been formally unified.
The US liquid gallon dominates in the United States for fuel, milk, paint, and pool chemicals. The imperial gallon is the legal measure in the UK for draught beer and cider (though fuel is sold in liters). The dry gallon surfaces in commodity pricing—e.g., blueberries sold by the dry gallon at some farmer's markets. Knowing which gallon a label refers to prevents costly measurement errors.
All three gallons convert to each other by going through milliliters. Multiply the quantity by its mL factor, then divide by the target gallon's mL factor. This two-step process (or a single ratio) is what this calculator automates for you, saving time and eliminating unit ambiguity.
1 US liquid gallon = 3.78541 liters. That is the standard value used for fuel, milk, and most US household liquid measurements.
1 imperial gallon = 4.54609 liters, about 20 % more than a US gallon. That difference matters when comparing UK fuel or beverage volumes with US labels.
The US dry gallon (4,404.88 mL) is derived from the Winchester bushel and is used in agriculture for dry commodities. It is much less common than the liquid gallon, but it still appears in some produce and grain contexts.
The US gallon is based on the 1707 Queen Anne wine gallon (231 cubic inches), while the imperial gallon was redefined in 1824 as 10 pounds of water (277.42 cubic inches). They are different historical standards, so they never lined up exactly.
16 US cups in a US gallon. An imperial gallon holds about 18.2 metric cups, so the cup count changes with the gallon definition. An imperial gallon holds about 18.2 metric cups.
4 quarts = 1 gallon in both US and imperial systems, though the quart sizes differ accordingly. That makes quart-to-gallon scaling easy once the gallon type is known.