Cubic Feet to Gallons

Convert cubic feet to gallons instantly, with a full reference table.

Cubic Feet to Gallons (US) conversion table
Cubic Feet (ft³)Gallons (US) (gal)
17.48
214.96
322.44
429.92
537.4
644.88
752.36
859.84
967.32
1074.81
Formula: One cubic foot equals 7.48052 US gallons. To convert cubic feet to gallons, multiply by 7.48052.

Free to use — premium coming soon

FREE
  • Instant conversion
  • Reference table
  • Reverse direction
PREMIUM
  • Remove ads
  • Custom table ranges
  • Bulk conversions

About the Cubic Feet to Gallons

The Cubic Feet to Gallons converter turns a volume measured in cubic feet (ft³) into gallons, the unit most people actually picture when they think about water, fuel, or any liquid. One cubic foot holds about 7.48 US liquid gallons, so the tool multiplies whatever value you enter by that factor and shows the result instantly. It exists because cubic feet are how spaces and meters report volume, while gallons are how we buy, store, and reason about liquids in everyday life. Type in a single number and you skip the mental math and the rounding mistakes.

You will reach for this conversion most often around water. Utility meters and bills frequently report usage in cubic feet, CCF, or HCF (hundred cubic feet), and converting to gallons makes that usage tangible: 1 CCF equals 100 cubic feet, or about 748 gallons. The same math helps when you size an aquarium, estimate how much water a pond or pool holds, or figure the capacity of a tank, cistern, or rain barrel. Anyone working from blueprints, drainage plans, or appliance specs that list volume in cubic feet can use it to talk in gallons instead.

The conversion is pure multiplication, which is why it is exact rather than an estimate. The precise factor for US liquid gallons is 7.480519 gallons per cubic foot; rounding to 7.48 is accurate enough for nearly every household or hobby task. For an imperial (UK) gallon, one cubic foot equals roughly 6.22884 gallons, because an imperial gallon is larger than a US one. If you are converting a water bill, confirm which gallon your utility uses before trusting the number, since US and UK figures differ by about 20 percent.

Everything runs in your browser the moment you enter a value, so nothing you type is uploaded, stored, or shared. There is no account, no file upload, and no server round trip, which keeps the conversion fast and private whether you are checking one figure or several in a row. Because the result comes from a fixed mathematical ratio, it does not drift or depend on a network connection. For practical work the answer is reliable to the decimal places shown; if you need engineering-grade precision, use the full 7.480519 factor rather than the rounded 7.48.

Frequently asked questions

How many gallons are in one cubic foot?

One cubic foot equals about 7.48 US liquid gallons, more precisely 7.480519. For imperial (UK) gallons, one cubic foot is about 6.22884 gallons.

What is the formula to convert cubic feet to gallons?

Multiply the volume in cubic feet by 7.480519 to get US gallons (gallons = cubic feet × 7.480519). For a quick estimate, multiply by 7.48.

How do I convert my water bill from cubic feet or CCF to gallons?

Multiply cubic feet by 7.48 for US gallons. If your bill is in CCF or HCF (hundred cubic feet), multiply by 748 instead, since 1 CCF equals 100 cubic feet, or about 748 gallons.

Does this use US gallons or imperial (UK) gallons?

The standard result is US liquid gallons (7.480519 per cubic foot). An imperial gallon is larger, so one cubic foot is only about 6.22884 imperial gallons; check which unit your country or utility uses.

How many gallons of water does a 55 cubic foot tank hold?

About 411 US gallons (55 × 7.48 ≈ 411.4). The same method works for any tank, pond, or pool: just multiply its volume in cubic feet by 7.48.

From our blog

Time Units Explained: From One Second to a Full Year

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026

Time is one of the few measurements where the units do not follow a tidy base-ten pattern. Length steps neatly in tens and hundreds, but time mixes 60, 24, 7, and roughly 30, which is exactly why conversions trip people up. The key is to anchor everything to a single building block: the second. Once you know how many seconds live inside each larger unit, every conversion becomes the same two-step move regardless of which units you start and end with.

Start with the exact relationships. Sixty seconds make a minute, sixty minutes make an hour, and twenty-four hours make a day. Multiply those together and a day contains 86,400 seconds. Seven of those days give a week of 604,800 seconds. These figures are fixed and never change, so any conversion among seconds, minutes, hours, days, and weeks is perfectly precise. Writing them down once, or letting a converter hold them for you, removes the most common source of slip-ups, which is forgetting a factor of 60 somewhere in the chain.

Months and years are where exactness ends and averaging begins. A calendar month can be 28, 29, 30, or 31 days, and a year is 365 days except every fourth year when it is 366. To give a usable single answer, conversions lean on averages: about 30.44 days for a month and 365.25 days for a year. That quarter-day is the leap day spread across four years. The result is close enough for planning and schoolwork but should not be used where a contract specifies an exact billing period or calendar.

To convert by hand, multiply your value by the seconds in its unit, then divide by the seconds in the target unit. Say you want to know how many minutes are in three days. Three days is 259,200 seconds, and dividing by 60 gives 4,320 minutes. The same recipe works for any pair. A converter simply automates this so you avoid keystroke errors and can flip the direction instantly, which matters when you are toggling between, say, a runtime in seconds and a schedule in hours.

Pick the unit that fits the audience for your number. A backup job is clearer as hours than as 28,800 seconds; a sprint interval is clearer as seconds than as a fraction of a minute. Good time conversion is not just arithmetic, it is choosing the form that other people can read at a glance. Convert when the unit is wrong for the task, keep exact units exact, and treat month and year results as solid estimates rather than guarantees.

  • Memorize three anchors: 60 seconds per minute, 3,600 seconds per hour, and 86,400 seconds per day. Most other conversions build directly from these.
  • For month and year results, convert through days first if you need a specific calendar, such as a 30-day billing cycle or a non-leap 365-day year.
  • When converting for video, remember the tool gives duration in seconds, not frames; multiply by your frame rate (such as 24 or 30) to get a frame count.
  • Use decimal hours for time tracking and scheduling tools (2.5 hours) but hours-and-minutes for human-readable reports (2 hours 30 minutes).

Read the full guide →

Tool by the Super Simple Digital Tools Team. Reviewed by our editorial team. Free to use, no signup required.

Related tools