Convert Cubic Meter to Barrel (bbl)

The cubic meter is the SI volume unit for water utilities, shipping containers, and construction materials.

6.289811
1 6.289811 bblNIST · BIPM accuracy

Cubic Meter to Barrel Conversion Table

10 common values
Cubic MeterBarrel
1 6.289811 bbl
2 12.579622 bbl
5 31.449054 bbl
10 62.898108 bbl
20 125.79622 bbl
50 314.49054 bbl
100 628.98108 bbl
200 1,257.9622 bbl
500 3,144.9054 bbl
1,000 6,289.8108 bbl

How to Convert Cubic Meter to Barrel Manually

Step by Step

Converting cubic meters to barrels is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.

  1. 1
    Take your value in cubic meters
    Start with the number of cubic meters () you want to convert.
  2. 2
    Multiply by 6.289811
    The conversion factor from to bbl is 6.289811. Multiply your value by this number.
  3. 3
    Read the result in barrels
    The result is your value in barrels (bbl).
Practical Examples
1
equals
6.289811 bbl
5
equals
31.449054 bbl
10
equals
62.898108 bbl
25
equals
157.24527 bbl
100
equals
628.98108 bbl

Formula

Multiply the value in cubic meters by 6.289811. For the reverse direction, multiply by 0.158987.

Forwardbbl = m³ × 6.289811
Reversem³ = bbl × 0.158987
Example: 10 × 6.289811 = 62.898108 bbl

Tips

Use these in everyday conversions
  • 1 m³ = 1000 L = 1,000,000 ml.
  • A cube 1 m on each side contains 1 m³ — useful mental image.
  • Concrete for a small patio slab (3 × 3 × 0.1 m) = 0.9 m³.

Common Mistakes

Avoid these
  • Confusing m³ with m² (area) on architectural plans.
  • Using m³ when litres would communicate better for small volumes.
  • Mixing cubic metres and cubic feet without conversion — 1 m³ = 35.3 ft³.

About Cubic Meter and Barrel

What is the Cubic Meter?

The cubic meter equals exactly 1,000 liters and is the SI unit of volume, used for water utilities, construction materials, shipping containers, gas volumes, and industrial-scale measurements. Domestic water bills typically show consumption in cubic meters (a typical household uses 5–15 m³ per month), and natural-gas billing also uses m³. Concrete is delivered by the cubic meter, and shipping containers have internal volumes of about 33 m³ (20-ft) or 67 m³ (40-ft). The cubic meter is the volume of a cube measuring 1 meter on each side. It relates to the liter (1 m³ = 1,000 L), the cubic centimeter (1 m³ = 1,000,000 cm³), the cubic foot (1 m³ ≈ 35.31 ft³), and the US gallon (1 m³ ≈ 264.17 gal). Truck-cargo capacity, swimming-pool size, and natural-gas reserves are all commonly expressed in cubic meters.

  • Household water and gas consumption on utility bills
  • Concrete ordering for construction projects
  • Shipping container and freight capacity
Real-world examples

A 20 ft shipping container holds ~33 m³. UK household water use is ~130 m³/year. Natural gas is billed per m³ in Europe.

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
Real-world examples

Brent crude and WTI oil are priced in US dollars per barrel. Global oil demand is about 100 million barrels per day.

Learn About Both Units

🧪 Reference

What is the Cubic Meter?

Read the unit page →
🧪 Reference

What is the Barrel?

Read the unit page →

Cubic Meter to Barrel FAQ

5 questions
How many barrels in a cubic meter?
One cubic meter equals 6.289811 barrels.
How do I convert cubic meters to barrels?
Multiply the cubic meter value by 6.289811 to get the equivalent in barrels.
What is 100 cubic meters in barrels?
100 cubic meters equals 628.98108 barrels.
Is a cubic meter bigger than a barrel?
Yes. 1 cubic meter equals 6.289811 barrels, so one cubic meter is larger.
How to convert cubic meters to barrels without a calculator?
Multiply by 6.29 for a quick estimate; use a calculator for precise results.

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