Convert Barrel to Cubic Foot (bbl → ft³)
The oil barrel equals 42 US gallons and is the global benchmark for crude oil pricing and trading.
Barrel to Cubic Foot Conversion Table
10 common values| Barrel | Cubic Foot |
|---|---|
| 1 bbl | 5.614583 ft³ |
| 2 bbl | 11.229167 ft³ |
| 5 bbl | 28.072917 ft³ |
| 10 bbl | 56.145833 ft³ |
| 20 bbl | 112.29167 ft³ |
| 50 bbl | 280.72917 ft³ |
| 100 bbl | 561.45833 ft³ |
| 200 bbl | 1,122.9167 ft³ |
| 500 bbl | 2,807.2917 ft³ |
| 1,000 bbl | 5,614.5833 ft³ |
How to Convert Barrel to Cubic Foot Manually
Step by StepConverting barrels to cubic feet is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in barrelsStart with the number of barrels (bbl) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 5.614583The conversion factor from bbl to ft³ is 5.614583. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in cubic feetThe result is your value in cubic feet (ft³).
Formula
Multiply the value in barrels by 5.614583. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.178108.
ft³ = bbl × 5.614583bbl = ft³ × 0.178108Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 oil barrel = 42 US gallons = 158.987 L exactly.
- Barrel prices quoted in USD — watch currency impact on non-US economies.
- Different industries (beer, dry goods) use different barrel sizes — oil barrel is a specific unit.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using beer barrel (163.7 L) or dry barrel (115.6 L) in oil contexts.
- Confusing barrel of oil with barrel of beer — different volumes.
- Assuming barrels are standard worldwide — only oil industry uses the 42 gallon version globally.
About Barrel and Cubic Foot
What is the Barrel?
The oil barrel equals exactly 42 US gallons (158.987 liters) and is the global benchmark unit for crude oil pricing and trading. The 42-gallon size dates to the 1860s Pennsylvania oil boom, when oil was shipped in repurposed wooden barrels of various sizes; the standard settled at 42 gallons as a practical industry compromise. Today, the oil barrel is virtually synonymous with crude oil — Brent crude and WTI prices are quoted per barrel ($/bbl), OPEC tracks production in barrels per day, and proven reserves are listed in billions of barrels. Despite metrication, the barrel persists in petroleum trading and journalism worldwide. It relates to the US gallon (1 bbl = 42 US gal), the cubic meter (1 bbl ≈ 0.159 m³), and the liter (1 bbl ≈ 159 L). Note that beer and wine barrels have different volumes.
- Crude oil international pricing (Brent, WTI)
- Petroleum product reporting (OPEC, EIA)
- Energy-sector financial reporting
Brent crude and WTI oil are priced in US dollars per barrel. Global oil demand is about 100 million barrels per day.
What is the Cubic Foot?
The cubic foot equals approximately 28.317 liters (or exactly 1,728 cubic inches) and is the American standard volume unit for HVAC capacity, natural-gas billing, refrigerator interior volume, and bulk material like concrete or mulch. American gas utilities measure delivered gas in 'CCF' (hundred cubic feet) or 'MCF' (thousand cubic feet), even when the customer thinks in terms of monthly bills. Refrigerators are advertised by their interior cubic-foot capacity (typical home unit: 18–25 ft³). Air-conditioning systems are rated in CFM (cubic feet per minute) airflow. Concrete is sometimes priced by the cubic yard (27 ft³), and mulch and topsoil are often sold by cubic foot bags. The cubic foot relates to the cubic yard (27 ft³ = 1 yd³), the cubic inch (1,728 in³ = 1 ft³), the cubic meter (1 ft³ ≈ 0.0283 m³), and the gallon (1 ft³ ≈ 7.481 US gal).
- US air-conditioning and ventilation flow (CFM)
- US natural gas consumption
- Refrigerator and freezer capacity in the US
A typical US fridge is 20 cu ft (566 L). US HVAC flow rated in CFM. US residential gas billed per 100 cu ft (CCF).