Convert UK Gallon to Milliliter (gal (UK) → ml)
The UK imperial gallon is 20% larger than the US gallon and remains in British and Caribbean usage.
UK Gallon to Milliliter Conversion Table
10 common values| UK Gallon | Milliliter |
|---|---|
| 1 gal (UK) | 4,546.09 ml |
| 2 gal (UK) | 9,092.18 ml |
| 5 gal (UK) | 22,730.45 ml |
| 10 gal (UK) | 45,460.9 ml |
| 20 gal (UK) | 90,921.8 ml |
| 50 gal (UK) | 227,304.5 ml |
| 100 gal (UK) | 454,609 ml |
| 200 gal (UK) | 909,218 ml |
| 500 gal (UK) | 2,273,045 ml |
| 1,000 gal (UK) | 4,546,090 ml |
How to Convert UK Gallon to Milliliter Manually
Step by StepConverting UK gallons to milliliters is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in UK gallonsStart with the number of UK gallons (gal (UK)) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 4,546.09The conversion factor from gal (UK) to ml is 4,546.09. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in millilitersThe result is your value in milliliters (ml).
Formula
Multiply the value in UK gallons by 4,546.09. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.00022.
ml = gal (UK) × 4,546.09gal (UK) = ml × 0.00022Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 UK gallon = 4.54609 L exactly = 160 UK fluid ounces.
- 1 UK gallon ≈ 1.201 US gallons.
- UK mpg × 0.832 = US mpg (same car, different unit).
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Comparing UK mpg with US mpg directly — UK figures are about 20% higher for the same car.
- Using 4.5 L instead of 4.546 L for precise conversion.
- Assuming modern UK car ads quote US gallons — they always use UK gallons.
About UK Gallon and Milliliter
What is the UK Gallon?
The UK imperial gallon equals exactly 4.54609 liters and is approximately 20% larger than the US gallon. Established by the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824 to standardize earlier ale and corn gallons, the imperial gallon was designed so that 10 pounds of pure water at 62°F occupied exactly 1 gallon. Although the United Kingdom has officially adopted the liter for fuel sales since 1995, the imperial gallon persists in everyday speech ('miles per gallon' for car fuel economy) and remains the standard unit in some Caribbean and Pacific Commonwealth countries. The imperial gallon relates to the US gallon (1 imp gal ≈ 1.201 US gal), the imperial quart (4 imp qt = 1 imp gal), the imperial pint (8 imp pt = 1 imp gal — the famous British pint of beer), and the liter (1 imp gal ≈ 4.546 L).
- UK fuel economy in miles per gallon (UK mpg)
- Older British industrial and brewing contexts
- Commonwealth countries that retain imperial measures
UK petrol sold by litre since 1995, but economy is quoted in UK mpg: a diesel car at 60 mpg (UK) uses 4.7 L/100 km.
What is the Milliliter?
The milliliter equals one thousandth of a liter (0.001 L) and is the standard small-volume unit for cooking, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and laboratory work. One milliliter is exactly 1 cubic centimeter (1 cm³), a convenient relationship: 1 mL of pure water weighs 1 gram. The milliliter is the universal unit on medicine bottles (a typical cough syrup dose is 5 mL), cosmetics (a perfume bottle is 50–100 mL), and recipe measurements outside North America (a tablespoon is 15 mL, a teaspoon is 5 mL). Medical syringes are calibrated in mL, and IV drip rates are computed in mL per hour. The milliliter relates to the liter (1,000 mL = 1 L), the cubic centimeter (1 mL = 1 cm³ = 1 cc), the teaspoon (1 tsp = 5 mL), and the US fluid ounce (1 fl oz ≈ 29.57 mL).
- Liquid medication dosing in syringes
- Precise cooking and baking measurements
- Laboratory reagent measurement
A teaspoon holds about 5 ml. An espresso shot is 25–30 ml. An insulin pen delivers 0.1 ml increments.