Convert Liter to Cubic Foot (L → ft³)
The liter is the everyday metric unit for beverages, fuel, and household liquids in nearly every country.
Liter to Cubic Foot Conversion Table
10 common values| Liter | Cubic Foot |
|---|---|
| 1 L | 0.035315 ft³ |
| 2 L | 0.070629 ft³ |
| 5 L | 0.176573 ft³ |
| 10 L | 0.353147 ft³ |
| 20 L | 0.706293 ft³ |
| 50 L | 1.765733 ft³ |
| 100 L | 3.531467 ft³ |
| 200 L | 7.062933 ft³ |
| 500 L | 17.657333 ft³ |
| 1,000 L | 35.314667 ft³ |
How to Convert Liter to Cubic Foot Manually
Step by StepConverting liters 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 litersStart with the number of liters (L) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 0.035315The conversion factor from L to ft³ is 0.035315. 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 liters by 0.035315. For the reverse direction, multiply by 28.316847.
ft³ = L × 0.035315L = ft³ × 28.316847Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 L = 1000 ml = 1 dm³ = 0.001 m³ exactly.
- 1 L of water weighs 1 kg at 4 °C — use for quick mass estimates.
- Fuel economy in Europe is litres per 100 km; lower is better. US uses mpg where higher is better.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing L (litre) with l (lowercase), since lowercase l can be mistaken for digit 1. Capital L is preferred.
- Mixing litres and US gallons in fuel economy discussions.
- Writing engine displacement in ml instead of L — 1500 cc = 1.5 L.
About Liter and Cubic Foot
What is the Liter?
The liter equals exactly 1 cubic decimeter (1 dm³ = 0.001 m³) and is the everyday metric unit for liquids worldwide. Adopted as part of the metric system in the 1790s, the liter is used universally for beverages, fuel, household chemicals, and cooking liquids — except in the United States where gallons and fluid ounces dominate. The liter has special connection to mass: pure water at 4°C has almost exactly 1 kg per liter, a relationship designed into the metric system. Soda, milk, and water bottles in metric countries come in 0.5 L, 1 L, 1.5 L, and 2 L sizes. The liter relates to the milliliter (1,000 mL = 1 L), the cubic meter (1,000 L = 1 m³), the US gallon (1 L ≈ 0.264 gal), and the UK gallon (1 L ≈ 0.220 imp gal). Although not strictly an SI base unit, the liter is one of the most-used metric units globally.
- Bottled beverages and milk in Europe
- Petrol and diesel pricing in metric countries
- Engine displacement (car engines rated in litres)
A standard European petrol-car fuel tank is 50–60 L. A 2.0 L engine has a 2 litre displacement. A typical home boiler holds 150 L of hot water.
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).