Milliliters to Fluid Ounces — Free Volume Converter

Convert milliliters to US fluid ounces instantly with our free mL to fl oz converter. Perfect for recipes, beverage serving sizes, and liquid dosages.

Formula: fl oz (US) = mL × 0.033814

ML to FLOZ Conversion Table

MLFLOZ
1 mL0.0338 fl oz
100 mL3.3814 fl oz
500 mL16.907 fl oz

Formula

fl oz (US) = mL × 0.033814

Example: 1 mL = 0.0338 fl oz

Frequently Asked Questions

Looking for the reverse? FLOZ to ML Converter

About volume conversion

Volume conversion covers fluid capacities used in cooking, fuel, beverages, and industrial liquids. The biggest source of confusion is that a US gallon (3.785 liters) and a UK gallon (4.546 liters) are genuinely different — a 20% difference — so recipes and fuel economy figures don't port across the Atlantic without care. Other common volume units are liters, milliliters, cups, pints, and fluid ounces (also different between US and UK). Once you know which system a number comes from, conversion is just arithmetic.

How the math works

The liter is defined as exactly 1,000 cubic centimeters (1 dm³). All metric volume units follow directly: 1 mL = 1 cm³, 1 kL = 1 m³. Imperial units are historical but now precisely defined: 1 US fluid ounce = 29.5735 mL, 1 US cup = 236.588 mL, 1 US gallon = 3.78541 L. UK imperial units differ: 1 UK pint = 568.261 mL versus US pint = 473.176 mL. Our converter uses the US variant by default since it's more common in online recipes.

When you'll use this conversion

  • Cooking and baking — translating recipes between metric and cups-and-spoons
  • Fuel economy (MPG ↔ liters per 100 km)
  • Beverages — beer, wine, spirits (draft beer uses pints in UK and US)
  • Pharmaceuticals and intravenous fluids (mL is standard)
  • Aquariums and pools where water volume matters for chemistry
  • Engine displacement in cars (liters vs cubic inches)

A bit of history

The liter originated in 1795 France as a cubic decimeter — one of the cleanest definitions in measurement history. The US gallon descended from the Queen Anne wine gallon (231 cubic inches, set in 1707), while the UK gallon derives from the imperial gallon of 1824 (defined as the volume of 10 pounds of water). This split is why the US switched to smaller gallons when it standardized.

Common mistakes

  • Confusing US gallons with UK gallons — a 25% mpg difference between the two
  • Treating 1 fluid ounce as 30 mL — it's actually 29.57 mL (US) or 28.41 mL (UK)
  • Using weight ounces (28.35 g) when a recipe calls for fluid ounces (volume)
  • Assuming 1 liter of liquid always weighs 1 kg — only true for water; oils, honey, alcohol differ

Quick tips

  • For mental math: 1 US gallon ≈ 3.8 L, 1 cup ≈ 240 mL, 1 pint ≈ 475 mL (US) or 570 mL (UK)
  • Most online recipes use US measurements by default — watch for British sites though
  • Motor oil is sold in liters worldwide but may be quarts in the US — check before topping up