Convert Cup to US Gallon (cup → gal (US))
The US cup equals 240 milliliters and is the cornerstone of American recipe measurements and home baking.
Cup to US Gallon Conversion Table
10 common values| Cup | US Gallon |
|---|---|
| 1 cup | 0.063401 gal (US) |
| 2 cup | 0.126803 gal (US) |
| 5 cup | 0.317006 gal (US) |
| 10 cup | 0.634013 gal (US) |
| 20 cup | 1.268026 gal (US) |
| 50 cup | 3.170065 gal (US) |
| 100 cup | 6.340129 gal (US) |
| 200 cup | 12.680259 gal (US) |
| 500 cup | 31.700646 gal (US) |
| 1,000 cup | 63.401293 gal (US) |
How to Convert Cup to US Gallon Manually
Step by StepConverting cups to US gallons is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in cupsStart with the number of cups (cup) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.063401The conversion factor from cup to gal (US) is 0.063401. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in US gallonsThe result is your value in US gallons (gal (US)).
Formula
Multiply the value in cups by 0.063401. For the reverse direction, multiply by 15.772549.
gal (US) = cup × 0.063401cup = gal (US) × 15.772549Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- US cup = 240 ml common; 236.6 ml legal; UK cup = 284 ml; metric cup (AU/NZ) = 250 ml.
- Weights (grams) are more reliable than cups — a cup of flour can vary 30% depending on how packed.
- For baking, always use the recipe author's country convention.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using a UK 284 ml cup for a US recipe calling for 240 ml — 18% overshoot.
- Treating all dry ingredients as 1 cup = 240 g — only true for water.
- Using a coffee mug as a "cup" — mugs vary 200–400 ml.
About Cup and US Gallon
What is the Cup?
The US cup equals exactly 240 milliliters (a definition standardized for nutrition labeling; the legal volume for cooking is 236.588 mL, derived from 8 US fluid ounces). The cup is the cornerstone of American baking and home cooking, with virtually every US recipe using volume measurements rather than the weight measurements common in European cooking. Standard measuring-cup sets include 1, ½, ⅓, and ¼ cup sizes. The metric cup (used in Australia, New Zealand, and increasingly in international recipes) is exactly 250 mL — slightly larger than the US cup. The cup relates to the gallon (16 cups = 1 gal), the pint (2 cups = 1 pt), the fluid ounce (8 fl oz = 1 cup), the tablespoon (16 tbsp = 1 cup), and the milliliter (1 cup ≈ 237–240 mL). American baking-by-volume is sometimes criticized internationally for its variability compared to gram-based measurements.
- US cooking and baking recipes
- Cereal and beverage serving sizes in US nutrition labels
- Volume estimation when no scale is available
1 cup of water = 240 g = 240 ml. 1 cup of all-purpose flour weighs about 125 g. A Starbucks Tall is 12 fl oz = 1.5 cups.
What is the US Gallon?
The US liquid gallon equals exactly 3.785411784 liters and is the standard volume unit for fuel, beverages, milk, and household liquids in the United States. Defined as 231 cubic inches, the US gallon descends from the English wine gallon of 1707, which Britain replaced with the larger imperial gallon in 1824 — a divergence that left the United States with a different gallon than the rest of the English-speaking world. American gas stations price gasoline by the gallon (typical fill-up: 12–15 gallons), milk is sold in half-gallons and gallons, and many beverages come in fluid-ounce subdivisions of the gallon. The US gallon relates to the liter (1 gal ≈ 3.785 L), the quart (4 qt = 1 gal), the pint (8 pt = 1 gal), the cup (16 cups = 1 gal), and the imperial gallon (1 imp gal ≈ 1.201 US gal — about 20% larger).
- US fuel pricing and consumption
- US paint, oil and cleaning-product packaging
- US beverage containers (1-gallon jugs of milk)
US car tank ≈ 15 gallons (57 L). 1 US gallon of milk is a common grocery size (3.79 L). US paint often sold by the gallon.