Liters Per 100 Kilometers to Kilometers Per Liter Converter

Convert liters per 100 kilometers to kilometers per liter instantly with our free fuel economy conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

L/100km
=
km/L
4
Kilometers Per Liter (km/L)
25 L/100km = 4 km/L
🔄 Swap Units (Kilometers Per Liter → Liters Per 100 Kilometers)
25 L/100km
=
4 km/L
km/L = 100 ÷ L/100km

How to Convert Liters Per 100 Kilometers to Kilometers Per Liter

Converting from liters per 100 kilometers to kilometers per liter requires division rather than multiplication, because one is an efficiency measure and the other is a consumption measure. These have an inverse relationship: as one increases, the other decreases.

km/L = 100 ÷ L/100km

To convert, divide the constant 100 by the value in liters per 100 kilometers.

Example: Convert 30 L/100km to km/L.

Using the formula: km/L = 100 ÷ L/100km

km/L = 100 ÷ 30 = 3.33333 km/L

Therefore, 30 L/100km equals 3.33333 km/L.
Note: This is an inverse conversion. Higher L/100km values result in lower km/L values, and vice versa.

What Is a Liter Per 100 Kilometers?

The liter per 100 kilometres (symbol: L/100 km) is the standard unit of fuel consumption used in most of Europe, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, China, and many other countries worldwide. Unlike efficiency units where higher is better, a lower L/100 km value indicates better fuel economy (less fuel consumed). Liters per 100 kilometres directly answers the question “how much fuel will I use to travel 100 km?” This consumption-based measurement is considered more intuitive by many people because it scales linearly with fuel cost: if fuel costs €1.80 per litre and your car uses 6 L/100 km, then 100 km costs €10.80. Typical L/100 km values: efficient small cars 4–6 L/100 km, mid-size sedans 6–8 L/100 km, SUVs 8–12 L/100 km, sports cars 10–15 L/100 km, and hybrid vehicles 3–5 L/100 km. Modern diesel cars typically achieve 4–7 L/100 km. An important mathematical property of L/100 km: improving from 15 to 10 L/100 km saves more fuel per kilometre (5 L per 100 km) than improving from 10 to 5 L/100 km (also 5 L per 100 km), but the same absolute saving. With mpg, the same absolute improvement at different levels saves different amounts of fuel, which can be misleading.

What Is a Kilometer Per Liter?

The kilometer per liter (symbol: km/L) is a metric unit of fuel economy that measures the distance in kilometres a vehicle can travel using one liter of fuel. A higher km/L value indicates better fuel efficiency. Kilometers per liter is commonly used in many countries around the world, particularly in South America (Brazil, Argentina), parts of Asia (Japan, India), and some European countries for everyday fuel economy discussions. In Japan, the official fuel economy rating system (JC08 and WLTC test cycles) reports results in km/L. Japanese kei cars (micro cars) can achieve 20–30 km/L, while typical sedans get 12–20 km/L and larger SUVs get 8–14 km/L. The km/L unit provides an intuitive measure of fuel efficiency: it directly answers the question “how far can I drive on one liter of fuel?” For trip planning, simply multiply your fuel tank capacity in liters by the km/L rating to estimate your maximum range.

One kilometer per liter is equal to:

  • 2.352145 miles per gallon US (mpg US)
  • 2.82481 miles per gallon UK (mpg UK)
  • L/100km = 100 ÷ km/L

Understanding Fuel Economy Units

Fuel economy (or fuel efficiency) describes how far a vehicle can travel per unit of fuel, or equivalently, how much fuel is required to travel a given distance. There are two fundamentally different ways to express fuel economy:

Distance-per-Volume (Efficiency) Units

These units measure how far you can drive on a given amount of fuel. Higher values mean better fuel economy.

  • Kilometers per liter (km/L): Used in Japan, India, Brazil, and other countries. Measures kilometres traveled per one liter of fuel.
  • Miles per gallon US (mpg US): The standard in the United States. Uses the US gallon (3.785 liters).
  • Miles per gallon UK (mpg UK): Used in the United Kingdom. Uses the Imperial gallon (4.546 liters), which is about 20% larger than the US gallon. This means UK mpg values are always higher than US mpg values for the same car.

Volume-per-Distance (Consumption) Units

These units measure how much fuel is consumed to travel a given distance. Lower values mean better fuel economy.

  • Liters per 100 kilometers (L/100 km): The standard in Europe, Canada, Australia, China, and most other countries. Measures liters of fuel consumed per 100 km of driving.

Why Two Approaches?

The consumption approach (L/100 km) has a mathematical advantage: it scales linearly with fuel cost and fuel saved. Improving from 10 to 8 L/100 km always saves 2 liters per 100 km, regardless of the starting point.

The efficiency approach (mpg) can be misleading: improving from 15 to 20 mpg saves more fuel than improving from 35 to 40 mpg, even though both are a 5 mpg improvement. This is called the “MPG illusion.”

US vs UK Gallons

A common source of confusion is the difference between US and UK (Imperial) gallons:

  • 1 US gallon = 3.785411784 liters
  • 1 UK gallon = 4.54609 liters
  • 1 UK gallon = 1.20095 US gallons

This means a car rated at 30 mpg (US) would be rated at approximately 36 mpg (UK). Always check which gallon is being used when comparing fuel economy figures internationally.

Tips for Fuel Economy Conversions

  • Converting between efficiency units (km/L, mpg US, mpg UK) is straightforward multiplication. For example: km/L × 2.352145 = mpg US.
  • Converting between efficiency and consumption requires division, not multiplication. The relationship is inverse: L/100km = 235.2145 ÷ mpg US, or L/100km = 100 ÷ km/L.
  • Quick mental estimates: To roughly convert mpg US to L/100km, divide 235 by the mpg value. For example, 30 mpg ≈ 235 ÷ 30 ≈ 7.8 L/100km.
  • US vs UK mpg: To convert US mpg to UK mpg, multiply by approximately 1.201 (or add about 20%). To go the other way, multiply by 0.833 (or subtract about 17%).
  • km/L to mpg US: A quick approximation is to multiply km/L by 2.35. So 10 km/L ≈ 23.5 mpg.
  • EPA ratings: US EPA fuel economy estimates are for comparison purposes and actual fuel economy may vary by 10–20% depending on driving conditions, weather, terrain, and driving style.
  • Electric vehicles: EVs use different units (kWh/100km or MPGe). These are not directly comparable with gasoline fuel economy units without additional assumptions about energy content.

Liters Per 100 Kilometers to Kilometers Per Liter Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from liters per 100 kilometers to kilometers per liter.

Liters Per 100 KilometersKilometers Per Liter (km/L)
1 L/100km100
2 L/100km50
3 L/100km33.3333
4 L/100km25
5 L/100km20
6 L/100km16.6667
7 L/100km14.2857
8 L/100km12.5
9 L/100km11.1111
10 L/100km10
12 L/100km8.33333
14 L/100km7.14286
16 L/100km6.25
18 L/100km5.55556
20 L/100km5
25 L/100km4
30 L/100km3.33333
35 L/100km2.85714
40 L/100km2.5
45 L/100km2.22222
50 L/100km2
55 L/100km1.81818
60 L/100km1.66667
70 L/100km1.42857
80 L/100km1.25
90 L/100km1.11111
100 L/100km1

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