How to Convert Liters to Milliliters
To convert a volume measurement from liters to milliliters, multiply the volume by the conversion factor. Since one liter is equal to 1,000 milliliters, you can use this formula:
The volume in milliliters is equal to the liters multiplied by 1,000.
Using the formula: milliliters = liters × 1,000
milliliters = 5 L × 1,000 = 5,000 mL
Therefore, 5 liters equals 5,000 milliliters.
How Many Milliliters Are in a Liter?
There are 1,000 milliliters in one liter.
What Is a Liter?
The litre (US spelling: liter; symbol: L or l) is a metric unit of volume equal to 1 cubic decimetre (dm³), 1,000 cubic centimetres (cm³), or 0.001 cubic metres. Although not an SI base unit, the litre is accepted for use with the International System of Units. The litre is the most widely used unit of volume in the metric world. Beverages, fuel, cooking ingredients, and many consumer products are sold by the litre or millilitre in most countries outside the United States. Fuel economy in metric countries is expressed as litres per 100 kilometres (L/100 km). One litre of water at 4 °C has a mass of almost exactly 1 kilogram (0.999975 kg), which is a convenient relationship that was part of the original metric system design. The litre was originally defined as the volume of 1 kg of water, but was later redefined as exactly 1 dm³. In medicine, blood volume, IV fluid doses, and organ volumes are measured in litres and millilitres. The total blood volume of an adult human is approximately 4.7–5.5 litres.
One liter is equal to:
- 1,000 millilitres (mL)
- 1,000 cubic centimetres (cm³)
- 0.001 cubic metres (m³)
- 61.02374 cubic inches (in³)
- 0.035315 cubic feet (ft³)
- 0.264172 gallons (gal)
- 1.056688 quarts (qt)
- 33.814 fluid ounces (fl oz)
What Is a Milliliter?
The millilitre (US spelling: milliliter; symbol: mL or ml) is a metric unit of volume equal to one-thousandth of a litre, one cubic centimetre, or 10−6 cubic metres. The prefix “milli” denotes a factor of 10−3. Millilitres are used worldwide for measuring small volumes of liquids. In cooking, recipe measurements outside the US are given in millilitres. In medicine, drug dosages, syringe volumes, and IV drip rates are specified in mL. In cosmetics and personal care, product sizes are labelled in millilitres (e.g., a 30 mL eye cream, a 250 mL shampoo). One millilitre is exactly equal to one cubic centimetre (1 mL = 1 cm³). This equivalence is exact by definition and is used extensively in science and medicine. The mass of 1 mL of water at 4 °C is approximately 1 gram. In laboratory work, millilitres are the standard unit for measuring liquid reagents, solutions, and samples. Graduated cylinders, pipettes, burettes, and volumetric flasks are all calibrated in millilitres.
One milliliter is equal to:
- 0.001 litres (L)
- 1 cubic centimetre (cm³)
- 10−6 cubic metres (m³)
- 0.061024 cubic inches (in³)
- 0.033814 fluid ounces (fl oz)
- 0.067628 tablespoons (tbsp)
- 0.202884 teaspoons (tsp)
Understanding Volume Units
Volume is a measure of the three-dimensional space occupied by a substance or enclosed within a container. It is a fundamental physical quantity used in cooking, science, engineering, construction, medicine, and everyday life.
Volume units fall into two broad families: metric units (based on the litre and cubic metre) and US customary/imperial units (based on the gallon and cubic foot). While the metric system is used by most of the world, the US customary system remains dominant in the United States for everyday measurements.
US Customary Volume Units
- Cooking measures: The teaspoon (tsp), tablespoon (tbsp), cup, pint (pt), quart (qt), and gallon (gal) form a system of nested units. There are 3 tsp in 1 tbsp, 16 tbsp in 1 cup, 2 cups in 1 pint, 2 pints in 1 quart, and 4 quarts in 1 gallon.
- Fluid ounces: The fluid ounce (fl oz) bridges cooking and commercial measurement. One cup = 8 fl oz. Beverage containers are labelled in fluid ounces.
- Cubic measures: Cubic inches (in³), cubic feet (ft³), and cubic yards (yd³) are used in construction, shipping, and engineering. One cubic foot = 1,728 cubic inches, and one cubic yard = 27 cubic feet.
Metric Volume Units
- Litre (L): The fundamental metric volume unit for everyday use. Equal to 1,000 mL, 1,000 cm³, or 0.001 m³.
- Millilitre (mL) / Cubic centimetre (cm³): These two units are exactly equal (1 mL = 1 cm³). Used for small volumes in cooking, medicine, and science.
- Cubic metre (m³): The SI derived unit of volume. Equal to 1,000 litres. Used for large-scale measurements in construction, water management, and industry.
Key Relationships
- 1 US gallon = 231 cubic inches = 3.785412 litres (exact)
- 1 litre = 1,000 millilitres = 1,000 cubic centimetres (exact)
- 1 cubic metre = 1,000 litres (exact)
- 1 cubic foot = 1,728 cubic inches = 28.31685 litres = 7.480519 gallons
- 1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet = 764.555 litres
- 1 millilitre = 1 cubic centimetre (exact by definition)
Tips for Volume Conversions
- For US cooking conversions, remember the chain: 3 tsp = 1 tbsp, 2 tbsp = 1 fl oz, 8 fl oz = 1 cup, 2 cups = 1 pint, 2 pints = 1 quart, 4 quarts = 1 gallon.
- Quick metric-to-US approximation: 1 litre ≈ 1.06 quarts, or about 4.23 cups. A litre is slightly more than a quart.
- Quick US-to-metric approximation: 1 gallon ≈ 3.79 litres, or roughly 3.8 litres. Think “a gallon is about 4 litres” for rough estimates.
- 1 millilitre and 1 cubic centimetre are exactly the same volume. Use whichever is conventional in your field (mL in cooking/medicine, cm³ in engineering/automotive).
- For cubic measure conversions, remember that volume scales as the cube of length: 1 ft³ = 12³ = 1,728 in³, and 1 yd³ = 3³ = 27 ft³.
- US fluid ounces are NOT the same as weight ounces. One fluid ounce of water weighs about 1.043 oz. The names are similar but the measurements are different.
- US gallons are NOT the same as imperial (UK) gallons. The US gallon is 3.785 L, while the imperial gallon is 4.546 L — about 20% larger.
- The “metric cup” (250 mL) used in Australia is slightly larger than the US cup (236.6 mL). When following international recipes, check which cup standard is intended.
Liters to Milliliters Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from liters to milliliters.
| Liters | Milliliters (mL) |
|---|---|
| 1 L | 1,000 |
| 2 L | 2,000 |
| 3 L | 3,000 |
| 4 L | 4,000 |
| 5 L | 5,000 |
| 6 L | 6,000 |
| 7 L | 7,000 |
| 8 L | 8,000 |
| 9 L | 9,000 |
| 10 L | 10,000 |
| 11 L | 11,000 |
| 12 L | 12,000 |
| 13 L | 13,000 |
| 14 L | 14,000 |
| 15 L | 15,000 |
| 16 L | 16,000 |
| 17 L | 17,000 |
| 18 L | 18,000 |
| 19 L | 19,000 |
| 20 L | 20,000 |
| 21 L | 21,000 |
| 22 L | 22,000 |
| 23 L | 23,000 |
| 24 L | 24,000 |
| 25 L | 25,000 |
| 26 L | 26,000 |
| 27 L | 27,000 |
| 28 L | 28,000 |
| 29 L | 29,000 |
| 30 L | 30,000 |
| 31 L | 31,000 |
| 32 L | 32,000 |
| 33 L | 33,000 |
| 34 L | 34,000 |
| 35 L | 35,000 |
| 36 L | 36,000 |
| 37 L | 37,000 |
| 38 L | 38,000 |
| 39 L | 39,000 |
| 40 L | 40,000 |