What is cubic metre?
A cubic metre is the SI unit of volume, equal to a cube with one-metre sides. It is used in construction, water supply, industrial gas storage, and large-scale fluid measurement.
Real-world uses
Cubic metres are used for water and natural gas billing, concrete volumes in construction, shipping container capacities, and lumber measurement. Swimming pools, reservoirs, and water tanks are specified in m³. One m³ of water weighs one metric tonne.
History
The cubic metre is an SI-derived unit following naturally from the metre. It became the standard volume unit for large quantities in engineering and commerce. Water utilities worldwide adopted it as their billing unit, replacing older local measurements.
Common mistakes
Forgetting that 1 m³ = 1,000 litres, not 100. Also, confusing cubic metres with square metres—m³ is volume while m² is area. A small error in linear dimensions leads to large volumetric errors because volume scales cubically.
What is millilitre?
A millilitre is a metric unit of volume equal to one thousandth of a litre. It is commonly used in medicine, cooking, laboratory measurements, and the labelling of food and beverage products.
Real-world uses
Millilitres are used for medication dosages (cough syrup, injectable solutions), cooking measurements, cosmetic product volumes, and laboratory reagent quantities. A standard medical syringe is graduated in mL, and espresso shots are typically 25–30 mL.
History
The millilitre emerged naturally from the litre with metric prefix conventions. It became essential in medicine and laboratory science where precise small-volume measurements are critical. In medical contexts, "cc" (cubic centimetre) was long used interchangeably with mL.
Common mistakes
Confusing millilitres with cubic centimetres—they are numerically equal (1 mL = 1 cm³) but conceptually different units. Also, mixing up mL with mg; one is volume, the other is mass.
When is this conversion used?
Converting cubic metre to millilitre is useful in the volume domain when comparing values across different measurement standards or applying formulas that require a specific unit.
Worked examples
1 cubic metre = 1,000,000 millilitre
1 millilitre = 0.001 litre
How to convert cubic metre to millilitre
To convert cubic metre to millilitre, multiply the value by 1,000,000.
To convert millilitre back to cubic metre, multiply by 0.000001.
Measurement standards
The cubic metre is the SI derived unit of volume. The litre, equal to exactly one cubic decimetre (0.001 m³), is accepted by the BIPM for use alongside SI units. Both the lowercase "l" and uppercase "L" are approved symbols for the litre.
Did you know?
An Olympic swimming pool holds 2,500 cubic metres of water — about 2.5 million litres. The Amazon River discharges roughly 209,000 cubic metres per second, enough to fill 84 Olympic pools every single second.
Quick reference: cubic metre to millilitre
| cubic metre | millilitre |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 100,000 |
| 0.5 | 500,000 |
| 1 | 1,000,000 |
| 2 | 2,000,000 |
| 5 | 5,000,000 |
| 10 | 10,000,000 |
| 25 | 25,000,000 |
| 50 | 50,000,000 |
| 100 | 100,000,000 |
| 250 | 250,000,000 |
| 500 | 500,000,000 |
| 1,000 | 1.000000e+09 |
Common values
| cubic metre | millilitre | |
|---|---|---|
| A teaspoon | 0.000005 cubic metre | 5 millilitre |
| A cup of coffee | 0.00025 cubic metre | 250 millilitre |
| A water bottle | 0.0005 cubic metre | 500 millilitre |
| A bathtub | 0.3 cubic metre | 300,000 millilitre |
| A swimming pool (Olympic) | 2,500 cubic metre | 2.500000e+09 millilitre |
Available Volume units
More cubic metre conversions
- Convert cubic metre to litre
- Convert cubic metre to millilitre
- Convert cubic metre to US gallon
- Convert cubic metre to Imperial gallon
- Convert cubic metre to US fluid ounce
- Convert cubic metre to Imperial fluid ounce
- Convert cubic metre to teaspoon (metric)
- Convert cubic metre to tablespoon (metric)
- Convert cubic metre to cubic centimetre