Convert US Gallon to Pint (gal (US) → pt)
The US gallon is the standard unit for fuel, milk, and beverages across the United States.
US Gallon to Pint Conversion Table
10 common values| US Gallon | Pint |
|---|---|
| 1 gal (US) | 8 pt |
| 2 gal (US) | 16 pt |
| 5 gal (US) | 40 pt |
| 10 gal (US) | 80 pt |
| 20 gal (US) | 160 pt |
| 50 gal (US) | 400 pt |
| 100 gal (US) | 800 pt |
| 200 gal (US) | 1,600 pt |
| 500 gal (US) | 4,000 pt |
| 1,000 gal (US) | 8,000 pt |
How to Convert US Gallon to Pint Manually
Step by StepConverting US gallons to pints is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in US gallonsStart with the number of US gallons (gal (US)) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 8The conversion factor from gal (US) to pt is 8. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in pintsThe result is your value in pints (pt).
Formula
Multiply the value in US gallons by 8. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.125.
pt = gal (US) × 8gal (US) = pt × 0.125Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 US gallon = 3.785 L = 128 US fluid ounces = 4 quarts.
- Converting mpg (US) to L/100 km: 235.215 / mpg = L/100 km.
- The US gallon is based on the old English Queen Anne wine gallon (1707).
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using UK gallons on a US fuel-economy figure — 30 mpg (US) = 36 mpg (UK).
- Confusing US gallon (3.79 L) with UK gallon (4.55 L) — 20% difference.
- Using "gallon" without qualifier in cross-Atlantic commerce.
About US Gallon and Pint
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.
What is the Pint?
The pint equals exactly one half of a US quart (0.473176473 liters) in the United States and 0.568261 liters in the United Kingdom (the imperial pint, 20% larger than the US pint). The British pint is iconic in pub culture — beer and cider are served in imperial pints in UK pubs, and the imperial pint glass is a regulated measure required by law. In the United States, milk is commonly sold by the pint (often as half-quart cartons), and ice cream containers are often pints (16 fl oz US). The pint relates to the gallon (8 pt = 1 gal), the quart (2 pt = 1 qt), the cup (2 cups = 1 US pt), and the fluid ounce (16 fl oz = 1 US pt; 20 fl oz = 1 imperial pt). The discrepancy between US and UK pints reflects the older 1824 imperial reform that the United States did not adopt.
- UK draft beer (half-pint and pint glasses)
- British doorstep milk delivery
- US ice-cream and ale packaging
A UK pub pint is 568 ml by law. A US pint of Ben & Jerry's ice cream is 473 ml. UK milk bottles are often pints.