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Liters to Cups (L to cup)

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Converting litres to US cups bridges metric beverage and recipe quantities to American kitchen-cup measurements. One litre contains 4.227 US cups, the figure derived from a US cup of exactly 236.588 millilitres. The conversion is the workhorse for translating European recipes into American kitchen practice, scaling restaurant batch quantities into per-portion cup measures, and converting between metric beverage container sizes (1 L, 1.5 L, 2 L bottles) and US-cup-tier hospitality service standards. Note that this is the US-customary cup; metric cups (250 mL exactly) and Australian cups (250 mL) produce different conversion factors of 4.0 cups per litre.

How to convert Liters to Cups

Formula

cups = L × 4.22675

To convert litres to US cups, multiply the litre figure by 4.22675. The factor follows from the US cup definition of exactly 236.588 mL: dividing 1,000 mL (one litre) by 236.588 mL (one US cup) produces 4.22675 cups per litre. The arithmetic is exact at the published precision because the US cup definition is a fixed integer multiple of the US fluid ounce, which itself is fixed by the 1893 Mendenhall Order. For mental approximation the "× 4.2" or "× 4.23" shortcut produces results within 0.07% of precise — accurate enough for any recipe or hospitality context. For metric or Australian cups (250 mL exactly), substitute 4.0 cups per litre in the conversion. Always confirm which cup definition applies, especially in cookbook translations between US, UK, and Australian sources.

Worked examples

Example 11 L

1 litre equals 4.227 US cups. The figure rounds in casual conversation to "just over 4 cups," which is the mental shortcut most home bakers use. For precision baking the full 4.22675 factor matters, especially when a litre quantity needs to translate into quarter-cup or eighth-cup precision for ingredient-fraction recipes.

Example 22 L

2 litres — the standard soft-drink bottle and a common European water-bottle size — equals 8.45 cups. The figure puts a 2 L bottle at "just over 8 cups," which scales to 16 half-cup servings or 8 one-cup servings for hospitality portion planning. The conversion makes a metric-spec container size legible in US-recipe units.

Example 33.785 L

3.785 litres — the volume of one US gallon — equals 16 cups exactly (since one US gallon contains 16 cups by definition). The figure illustrates the internal consistency of the US volume system: gallon → 4 quarts → 8 pints → 16 cups, all derived from the same gallon definition that converts to 3.785 L. The conversion confirms that the L-to-cups factor and the gallon-to-cups factor align cleanly through their shared US-gallon ancestor.

L to cup conversion table

Lcup
1 L4.2268 cup
2 L8.4535 cup
3 L12.6803 cup
4 L16.907 cup
5 L21.1338 cup
6 L25.3605 cup
7 L29.5873 cup
8 L33.814 cup
9 L38.0408 cup
10 L42.2675 cup
15 L63.4013 cup
20 L84.5351 cup
25 L105.6688 cup
30 L126.8026 cup
40 L169.0701 cup
50 L211.3376 cup
75 L317.0065 cup
100 L422.6753 cup
150 L634.0129 cup
200 L845.3506 cup
250 L1056.6882 cup
500 L2113.3764 cup
750 L3170.0646 cup
1000 L4226.7528 cup
2500 L10566.8821 cup
5000 L21133.7642 cup

Common L to cup conversions

  • 0.25 L=1.0567 cup
  • 0.5 L=2.1134 cup
  • 0.75 L=3.1701 cup
  • 1 L=4.2268 cup
  • 1.5 L=6.3401 cup
  • 2 L=8.4535 cup
  • 3 L=12.6803 cup
  • 4 L=16.907 cup
  • 5 L=21.1338 cup
  • 10 L=42.2675 cup

What is a Liter?

One litre (L or l) is exactly one cubic decimetre — 0.001 cubic metres — by the 12th CGPM resolution of 1964. The two equally-valid symbols are a quirk shared with no other BIPM-recognised unit: the lowercase "l" was the original CIPM-adopted form from 1879, and the uppercase "L" was added by the 16th CGPM in 1979 because the lowercase letter is easily confused with the digit "1" in many typefaces and in handwriting (a "1l" reads as "11"). The 9th edition of the SI Brochure (2019) still lists both. The capital L predominates in the United States, Canada, Australia and Japan; the lowercase l predominates across the European Union, the United Kingdom and most of the Commonwealth. The litre is not part of the coherent SI — its SI-coherent equivalent is the cubic decimetre (dm³), a name almost no one outside metrology pedantry uses — but it is listed in the SI Brochure as a non-SI unit accepted for use with the SI alongside the tonne, the hectare and the minute. Decimal multiples (millilitre mL, centilitre cL, decilitre dL, hectolitre hL) all use SI prefixes on the litre root, with the millilitre exactly equal to one cubic centimetre (cm³) — the definitional cleanness behind the universal kitchen and pharmacology equation 1 mL = 1 cc.

The litre's origin is the most peculiar in the metric system: at its 1795 inception it was definitionally entangled with the kilogram, and the two units had to be untangled by force four years later. The Loi du 18 germinal an III (7 April 1795), the metric law passed during the French Revolution, defined the gramme as the mass of one cubic centimetre of pure water at the temperature of melting ice — and in the same act named the litre as one cubic decimetre, with the consequence that one litre of melting-ice water was, by parallel definition, exactly one kilogramme. The parallel collapsed in 1799 when the kilogramme was given its own physical artefact, the platinum Kilogramme des Archives, whose mass was thereafter defined independently of any volume of water. The litre reverted briefly to its geometric form (1 dm³), but a 1901 resolution of the 3rd CGPM re-coupled it to mass, redefining the litre as the volume occupied by one kilogramme of pure water at maximum density (4 °C) under standard atmospheric pressure — a definition that produced a litre about 28 parts per million larger than one cubic decimetre, owing to impurity and atmospheric-pressure assumptions in the underlying water-density measurements. The 12th CGPM in 1964 reverted the litre to its 1795 form, fixing one litre as exactly one cubic decimetre and ending the water-anchored interlude. The 16th CGPM in 1979 then added the capital "L" as an alternative symbol to the original lowercase "l", primarily to spare typed and handwritten "l" from being confused with the digit "1" — the only instance in the SI of two equally-valid symbols for one unit.

The litre is the universal volume unit of nearly every metric jurisdiction and is recognised even within the otherwise customary-unit-dominant United States for pharmaceutical, scientific and engine-displacement uses. EU Directive 2007/45/EC harmonised consumer pack sizes across the bloc on 11 April 2009: still and sparkling wine in 750 mL, 1 L, 1.5 L, 3 L and larger; spirits in 100 mL, 200 mL, 350 mL, 500 mL, 700 mL, 1 L, 1.5 L, 1.75 L and 2 L; soft drinks and water on a separate schedule including 330 mL and 500 mL formats. The 750 mL wine bottle and the 700 mL UK/EU spirits bottle are global trade defaults, with the same spirits ranged into 750 mL bottles for the US, Canadian and many Asian markets — a labelling- and tariff-driven divergence whose retail consequence is that duty-free shops stock the 1 L "travel size" precisely to fall outside any domestic standard. Automotive engine displacement is denominated in litres on virtually every passenger-car badge and spec sheet outside North America: a "2.0L turbo" or "1.6L petrol" describes the swept volume of all cylinders combined, to one decimal place. The same engines in US-market documentation are also stated in litres for marketing, but SAE technical literature and aftermarket specifications still give cubic-inch displacement (CID) — a 5.0L V8 cross-references to a 305 CID engine — and the dual notation appears side by side on US-domestic muscle-car restoration parts catalogues. Formula One's technical regulations have specified a 1.6 L V6 turbo since 2014, and FIA road-racing classes are denominated in litres of displacement. Fuel retail pricing splits sharply by country. Every metric jurisdiction prices petrol and diesel per litre at the pump, including the United Kingdom, which transitioned from imperial-gallon to per-litre forecourt pricing in 1988. The United States, Liberia and a handful of Caribbean states retain the gallon — the divergence behind the perennial North American shock at European forecourts, where the headline per-litre figure must be multiplied by 3.785 to compare with US-gallon pricing. The UAE and Bahrain are residual imperial-gallon holdouts. Pharmaceutical and clinical practice is fully metric on litre-and-millilitre across every WHO-member country. Standard intravenous saline and dextrose bags are sized 100 mL, 250 mL, 500 mL and 1 L; oral-liquid medications are dosed in millilitres on every modern dispensing label. The British Pharmacopoeia and US Pharmacopoeia both denominate solution volumes in litres and millilitres, with the only material disagreement being on the abbreviation: BP mandates "mL" while USP allows both "mL" and "ml".

What is a Cup?

The cup refers to three distinct volume units in active 2026 commerce, all called "cup" without qualifier in their respective contexts. The US customary cup (US cup) is conventionally taken as exactly 236.588 mL — 8 US fluid ounces, half a US liquid pint, 1/16 of a US liquid gallon — a value that follows arithmetically from the 1959-IYPA-pegged US fluid ounce rather than from any standalone statutory definition of the cup itself. It is the unit used in nearly all American recipe writing, in the measuring-cup sets sold in US kitchen-equipment retail, and in the King Arthur Baking, America's Test Kitchen, Joy of Cooking and New York Times Cooking recipe formats. The US legal cup is exactly 240 mL, defined by FDA regulations 21 CFR 101.9 and 21 CFR 101.12 for use specifically on Nutrition Facts panel serving-size declarations under the NLEA 1990; the legal cup never appears in cookbook recipes, only on packaging-required nutritional disclosures. The metric cup is exactly 250 mL, used in Australian, New Zealand and most non-American international metric-system recipe writing, with the value chosen as a clean quarter-litre rather than as a back-conversion from any imperial figure. The three values bracket each other within a 5.7% range — small per individual cup, but cumulative across the multi-cup quantities typical of bread, cake and stock-pot recipes. None of the three is part of the SI; the US cups are recognised by NIST and the FDA, and the metric cup is recognised by the National Measurement Institute Australia and Standards New Zealand under their respective metric standards.

The cup has the shallowest historical depth of any volume unit in active 2026 commerce. Where the gallon, pint and quart trace back to medieval English statutes and the litre to revolutionary French law, the cup was codified gradually through twentieth-century home-economics teaching and food-industry standardisation, with no defining treaty or weights-and-measures act behind it. The unit emerged from American domestic cookery in the late nineteenth century, when standardised measuring vessels began to displace the older "teacup" and "tumbler" approximations that had dominated handwritten family recipes. Fannie Farmer's 1896 Boston Cooking-School Cook Book is conventionally credited with the decisive standardisation push: Farmer insisted on level measures rather than the heaped or generously-rounded amounts of earlier American cookery writing, and the 8-fluid-ounce cup she promoted became the household-economics standard taught in American secondary-school home-economics curricula through the early twentieth century. The figure was the US-fluid-ounce derivation — exactly half of a US liquid pint — with the 236.588 mL metric value appearing as a back-translation rather than as part of any standalone definition. The US legal cup of exactly 240 mL was introduced for nutrition-labelling purposes through the FDA's 1973 nutrition-labelling regulations and carried forward through the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990 (NLEA) and its 1993 implementation rules, with the rounded value chosen for clean serving-size arithmetic on Nutrition Facts panels. Australia adopted the 250 mL metric cup through its 1970s metrication push under the Metric Conversion Act 1970, with New Zealand following the same standard through its parallel 1969–76 metrication programme.

US recipe publishing is the cup's dominant industrial domain. The US customary cup (236.588 mL) is the assumed unit in essentially every American cookbook and recipe website not explicitly noted otherwise: King Arthur Baking, America's Test Kitchen, Cook's Illustrated, Bon Appétit, the New York Times Cooking, Joy of Cooking, Better Homes & Gardens, the Smitten Kitchen blog and the Serious Eats recipe library all denominate ingredients in cups by default, with weight-based measures (in grams or ounces) increasingly offered as a parallel option in baking-focused publications. The Cup4Cup, Bob's Red Mill and King Arthur baking-flour packaging on US grocery shelves prints "1 cup = X g" conversion tables on the back panel specifically because the volume-to-weight gap for flour is the most-cited source of recipe failure in US home baking. FDA Nutrition Facts labelling: the US legal cup of exactly 240 mL is the regulatory unit for serving-size declarations on packaged-food nutrition panels under 21 CFR 101.9 and 21 CFR 101.12. Reference Amounts Customarily Consumed (RACC) tables — published in 21 CFR 101.12(b) and revised most recently in the 2016 Nutrition Facts label overhaul — specify reference serving sizes for hundreds of food categories, with milk and milk substitutes set at 240 mL (1 cup) and many beverages at 240 mL or 360 mL multiples. The cleanly-rounded 240 mL was chosen over the customary 236.588 mL specifically to give Nutrition Facts panel arithmetic round serving-count numbers per pack, rather than the awkward 4.226-cups-per-litre figure the customary cup would yield. Australian and New Zealand cookery: the National Measurement Institute Australia recognises the metric cup at 250 mL, with the Australian Women's Weekly cookbooks, the RecipeTin Eats blog, the New Zealand Edmonds Cookery Book and the Stuff.co.nz Food platform all denominating recipes in 250 mL metric cups. Australian and New Zealand kitchen retail sells measuring-cup sets graduated on the 250 mL standard, distinct from the 236.588 mL US sets sold by Williams-Sonoma, OXO and Pyrex in American kitchens. UK cookery sits ambiguously between the systems. BBC Good Food, Jamie Oliver's recipe library, the Guardian's Felicity Cloake column and most modern UK food media denominate primarily in grams and millilitres rather than in cups, with the older UK domestic cup tradition (around 285 mL based on the imperial half-pint teacup, but never standardised) effectively absent from contemporary UK recipe publishing. UK readers encountering "1 cup" in an American-sourced recipe must explicitly choose between treating it as the US customary 236.588 mL or the metric 250 mL — the choice is rarely flagged by the recipe itself. Coffee and tea-room cups carry an unrelated convention. The "cup" of a 12-cup home drip coffee maker (Mr. Coffee, Cuisinart, Black+Decker) is a 5-fl-oz pour (148 mL), not the 8-fl-oz customary cup — a marketing legacy from the era when American drip coffee was served in smaller mugs, retained on appliance specifications even though the modern American coffee mug holds 10–14 fl oz. The same 5-oz "cup" is the unit on every box of Mr. Coffee paper filters and every drip-machine carafe-volume specification.

Real-world uses for Liters to Cups

Restaurant batch-recipe scaling for US kitchens

Commercial kitchens scaling European-origin recipes from litre-spec batch quantities into per-station cup measurements use the L-to-cups conversion to translate sauces, soups, and stocks into the volumetric units that line cooks measure with cup-and-pint tools. A 4 L sauce batch converts to 16.91 cups, which scales to 67.6 quarter-cup portions for plating — useful arithmetic for portion-cost analysis and food-cost-per-cover budget worksheets.

Brewing and homebrewing recipe translation

Homebrewers and small craft brewers in the US translating European beer recipes from litre-denominated mash and boil volumes into US-cup measurements for fermentation supplies and additive ingredients use the 4.227 conversion factor at every recipe-batch step. A typical 19 L (5 US gallon) homebrew batch converts back-and-forth between metric mash-water specifications and US-cup-spec malt, hop, and yeast-nutrient additions. The conversion runs in every cross-system brewing-software calculator.

Beverage industry container-vs-serving-size analysis

Soft-drink and bottled-water manufacturers selling in the US market need cup-equivalent serving size labels for their litre-denominated container offerings. A 1 L bottle contains 4.227 cups; a 2 L bottle contains 8.45 cups; a 16.9 fl oz US bottle (0.5 L) contains 2.11 cups. Marketing materials cross-reference cup-spec serving frequencies against litre-spec container sizes to communicate everyday consumption patterns to American consumers in the units they use to think about beverages.

When to use Cups instead of Liters

Use US cups when communicating with American home cooks, US-spec recipe authors, US restaurant kitchens, US hospitality portion-planning, or any context where the cup is the native volumetric measurement unit. Stay in litres when working with European recipe sources, scientific volumetric work, beverage-container-spec arithmetic, or any metric-domain workflow where the litre is the canonical unit. The conversion runs at every cross-Atlantic recipe translation, every metric-bottle-to-American-serving-spec calculation, and every brewing or fermentation arithmetic step that bridges European-style batch volumes to US-style additive measurements. The choice between L and cups depends on the audience's volumetric mental model — both describe the same physical volume at different scales, and the right scale is the one that produces the most natural figure for the receiving workflow.

Common mistakes converting L to cup

  • Confusing US cups (236.588 mL) with metric cups (250 mL) or Australian cups (250 mL). The L-to-cups factor differs: 4.227 for US cups, 4.0 for metric and Australian cups. Using the wrong factor introduces a 5.4% error per conversion, which matters in baking and any precision-volumetric context. UK does not have a standard cup measurement and instead uses fluid-ounce-and-pint denominations.
  • Treating "1 L = 4 cups" as exact rather than as a metric-cup approximation. The metric cup at 250 mL produces a clean 4.0 cups per litre; the US cup at 236.588 mL produces 4.227 cups per litre. The 5% gap is invisible in casual cooking but matters in hydration-percentage baking, brewing, and any precision recipe scaling where the cup-count drives ingredient ratios.

Frequently asked questions

How many cups in 1 litre?

1 litre equals 4.227 US cups (using the 236.588 mL US cup definition). For metric or Australian cups (250 mL exactly), 1 litre equals 4.0 cups. The 5% gap between the two cup standards matters in precision recipe scaling and shapes whether a "4 cups" recipe substitution against a 1 L source is exact (metric) or approximate (US).

Why do US, metric, and Australian cups all differ?

Because they emerged from different historical measurement traditions. The US cup of 236.588 mL derives from the US fluid ounce and the US gallon system standardised in 1893. The metric cup of 250 mL was defined cleanly as a quarter-litre when metric-system kitchens needed a cup-scale unit. The Australian cup matched the metric definition in the 1970s. The three cups share the name but represent different volumes; cookbook translations between traditions need explicit clarification.

How precise should this conversion be in cooking?

For most home cooking, three decimal places (4.227) is sufficient and matches the precision of household measuring cups. For competitive baking, brewing, and precision laminated-pastry work, use the full 4.22675 factor. For hospitality and restaurant batch scaling, two decimal places (4.23) usually suffices because portion serving sizes round to quarter-cup or eighth-cup increments anyway.

What about UK fluid ounces and pints — do they relate to cups?

The UK doesn't use cups as a standard volumetric unit; UK recipes typically use fluid ounces and pints instead. The UK fluid ounce equals 28.4 mL (vs the US fluid ounce of 29.6 mL); the UK pint equals 568 mL (vs the US pint of 473 mL). Converting between UK and US recipe quantities requires the explicit fluid-ounce-pint conversion path rather than going through cups, which would introduce additional ambiguity.

Can I mix metric ingredients and US-cup measurements in the same recipe?

Yes, with care. Use a metric scale for dry ingredients (flour, sugar, salt) where weight precision matters for recipe ratios, and use volumetric cup measures for liquid ingredients (water, milk, oil) where the volume-vs-weight gap is small. Mixing units works fine as long as each ingredient stays in its preferred denomination throughout the recipe; the L-to-cups conversion runs only at the recipe-translation boundary.

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