Last updated: April 22, 2026
Gallons to Quarts Converter
If you have ever doubled a soup recipe, filled a car’s engine with oil, bought paint for a room, or stocked up a water cooler, you have dealt with the gallon-to-quart relationship — even if you did not think of it in those terms. Gallons and quarts are both units of liquid volume in the US customary system, and they are directly related by a simple whole-number ratio that never changes: there are exactly 4 quarts in every gallon, and every quart is exactly one quarter of a gallon. This makes the conversion one of the cleanest in everyday measurement — no decimals, no approximations, no conversion factors to memorise beyond a single number.
This guide explains the gallon and quart, gives you the formula and worked examples, provides a full reference table, covers the US versus UK gallon difference, and walks through the real-world situations where this conversion comes up most often.
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The Gallons to Quarts Formula
One Exact Relationship
The relationship between gallons and quarts is defined — not measured or approximated. In the US customary system, one gallon is defined as exactly four quarts. This is not the result of a physical measurement that might have rounding error; it is the definitional structure of the unit system itself. Every conversion follows directly from this fixed relationship:
Quarts = Gallons × 4
Gallons = Quarts ÷ 4
The word ‘quart’ comes from the Latin ‘quartus,’ meaning fourth. A quart is literally one fourth of a gallon — which is why the formula is simply multiplying or dividing by 4.
Why the Conversion Is Always Clean
Unlike metric-to-imperial conversions — which involve irrational decimal factors like 3.785 litres per gallon or 2.54 centimetres per inch — the gallon-to-quart conversion stays entirely within the US customary system. Because both units belong to the same measurement hierarchy, they relate to each other through whole integers. This makes the conversion instantly reversible and perfectly exact at every step: 3 gallons is exactly 12 quarts, 7 quarts is exactly 1.75 gallons, and 100 gallons is exactly 400 quarts with no rounding error at any scale.
Use our gallons to pounds converter to easily convert liquid volume into weight based on density. It’s perfect for fuel, water, and other liquid measurements, providing fast and reliable results without complex calculations.
The US Liquid Volume Hierarchy
Where Gallons and Quarts Sit in the System
Gallons and quarts do not exist in isolation — they are part of a complete hierarchy of US liquid volume units, each defined as a fixed multiple of the next smaller unit. Understanding where each unit sits helps you move fluidly between all of them, not just between gallons and quarts:
| Unit | fl oz | Cups | Pints | Relationship |
| 1 fluid ounce (fl oz) | 1 | ⅛ | 1/16 | Smallest common unit |
| 1 cup | 8 | 1 | ½ | 8 fl oz |
| 1 pint (pt) | 16 | 2 | 1 | 2 cups = 16 fl oz |
| 1 quart (qt) | 32 | 4 | 2 | 2 pints = 4 cups = 32 fl oz |
| 1 gallon (gal) | 128 | 16 | 8 | 4 quarts = 8 pints = 128 fl oz |
The hierarchy flows upward in clean doublings: 2 cups make a pint, 2 pints make a quart, and 4 quarts make a gallon. This means a gallon contains 8 pints, 16 cups, and 128 fluid ounces. Every level of the hierarchy is a whole-number multiple of every other level, which is why US customary volume conversions within the same system are always exact.
Worked Examples — Gallons to Quarts
Example 1 — Scaling a Recipe
A punch recipe calls for 2 gallons of lemonade. You want to know how many quart containers you need to buy at the grocery store:
2 gallons × 4 = 8 quarts
You need 8 quart containers. Alternatively, you could buy 4 half-gallon (2-quart) jugs, or a single 2-gallon jug if one is available. Knowing that 2 gallons equals 8 quarts lets you pick whichever container size is most economical.
Example 2 — Engine Oil
A vehicle’s owner’s manual specifies a 5.5-quart oil capacity for a full oil change. You want to know how many gallons of oil to buy:
5.5 quarts ÷ 4 = 1.375 gallons
You need 1.375 gallons. Engine oil is sold in quart bottles and gallon jugs in the US. Buying one gallon jug (4 quarts) and two individual quart bottles (2 quarts) gives you 6 quarts total — enough for the 5.5-quart fill with 0.5 quarts left over for the top-off check at the next service interval. This is precisely how most home mechanics approach an oil change: buy a gallon plus extra quarts to cover the full specification.
Example 3 — Filling a Large Cooler
A 48-quart cooler needs to be filled with water for a camping trip. How many gallons is that?
48 quarts ÷ 4 = 12 gallons
The cooler holds 12 gallons. If you are filling it from 5-gallon water jugs, you would need 2 full jugs (10 gallons) plus an additional 2 gallons from a third jug — or you could use three full 5-gallon jugs and have 3 gallons left over. The gallon figure makes planning the water supply much easier than working with the quart number alone.
Example 4 — Paint for a Room
A hardware store sells interior wall paint in quart cans and gallon cans. You calculate that you need 10 quarts to paint a room with two coats. What is the most efficient way to buy the paint?
10 quarts ÷ 4 = 2.5 gallons
You need 2.5 gallons. Since paint is not sold in half-gallon cans at most retailers, the options are: two 1-gallon cans (8 quarts) plus two 1-quart cans, or three 1-gallon cans if the price per quart is lower in gallon format. Most professional painters buy in gallons whenever possible because the per-quart cost is lower in the larger container. Knowing the gallon equivalent immediately guides the purchasing decision.
Gallons to Quarts Conversion Table — Complete Reference
| Gallons (gal) | Quarts (qt) | Gallons (gal) | Quarts (qt) |
| 0.25 gal (1 qt) | 1 qt | 6 gal | 24 qt |
| 0.5 gal | 2 qt | 7 gal | 28 qt |
| 0.75 gal | 3 qt | 8 gal | 32 qt |
| 1 gal | 4 qt | 9 gal | 36 qt |
| 1.5 gal | 6 qt | 10 gal | 40 qt |
| 2 gal | 8 qt | 12 gal | 48 qt |
| 2.5 gal | 10 qt | 15 gal | 60 qt |
| 3 gal | 12 qt | 20 gal | 80 qt |
| 4 gal | 16 qt | 25 gal | 100 qt |
| 5 gal | 20 qt | 55 gal | 220 qt |
US Gallon vs. UK (Imperial) Gallon — An Important Distinction
Two Different Gallons
One of the most common sources of confusion in gallon-based conversions is that there are two different gallons in use around the world: the US gallon and the imperial gallon historically used in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth countries. They are not the same size, and using the wrong one can create meaningful errors in cooking, fuel purchasing, and liquid measurement when working across US and international contexts.
| Measure | US Gallon | US Imperial (UK) Gallon | Difference |
| 1 gallon in litres | 3.785 L | 4.546 L | UK ≈ 20% larger |
| Quarts per gallon | 4 quarts | 4 quarts | Same ratio |
| 1 quart in litres | 0.946 L | 1.137 L | UK qt ≈ 20% larger |
| Fluid ounces per quart | 32 fl oz | 40 fl oz | Different fl oz size |
| Fluid ounces per gallon | 128 fl oz | 160 fl oz | UK has 32 more fl oz |
| Primary use today | USA, some Latin America | UK (rarely; mostly metric) | — |
The Quarts-per-Gallon Ratio Is the Same in Both Systems
One fact that often surprises people: despite the gallon being a different size in the US and UK systems, both systems define 4 quarts to a gallon. The ratio 1 gallon = 4 quarts holds true in both the US customary and imperial systems. However, because the gallon itself is a different size, a US quart (0.946 litres) and a UK quart (1.137 litres) are also different sizes.
When a UK recipe specifies quarts, the quantities are larger than a US reader would expect. For the gallons-to-quarts conversion, the formula — multiply by 4 — is the same in both systems, but you need to know which gallon you are starting from to understand the actual volume involved.
Why the US Gallon Is Smaller
The US gallon is defined as 231 cubic inches, a definition inherited from the British wine gallon used in England before the 19th century. The UK imperial gallon was later redefined in 1824 as the volume of 10 pounds of water at a specific temperature, which produced a larger unit of approximately 277.4 cubic inches.
The United States kept its earlier definition while Britain updated to the new imperial standard, creating the permanent divergence that persists today. In modern practice, the UK has largely adopted metric units for most volume measurements, though imperial gallons occasionally appear in older plumbing specifications and some fuel economy comparisons.
Real-World Applications — Gallons and Quarts in Everyday Use
Cooking and Food Preparation
In US cooking, recipes for large batches — soups, stews, broths, beverages, and preserves — frequently cross the gallon-quart threshold. A recipe that calls for one gallon of chicken stock requires 4 quarts, which is the standard commercial packaging size for stock concentrate. When doubling or tripling recipes designed for home kitchens, knowing that 1 gallon equals 4 quarts allows you to scale ingredient quantities without reaching for a measuring cup for every conversion. Large-format baking — bread production, commercial kitchens, event catering — routinely works in gallons, while home recipes are written in quarts and cups, making the conversion constant and essential.
Automotive — Oil, Coolant, and Fluids
Vehicle maintenance is one of the most common real-world contexts for the gallon-quart conversion. Engine oil capacity is universally specified in quarts in the United States — typically 4 to 6 quarts for passenger cars and up to 10 or more quarts for trucks and performance engines. Coolant system capacity is similarly expressed in quarts or sometimes gallons. Windshield washer fluid is sold in gallon jugs. Automatic transmission fluid, power steering fluid, and brake fluid are sold in quart containers. Understanding the gallon-quart relationship lets you immediately assess whether a gallon jug is sufficient for the job or whether you need additional quart containers to reach the full specification
Home Improvement and Painting
Paint is one of the clearest everyday applications of the gallon-to-quart distinction. Hardware stores stock paint in four sizes: sample sizes (typically 8 ounces or 1 pint), quart cans, gallon cans, and 5-gallon buckets. A standard gallon of interior wall paint covers approximately 350 to 400 square feet per coat — enough for a medium-sized room in a single coat. Quart cans cover roughly 87 to 100 square feet and are used for smaller areas, touch-ups, or accent walls. When estimating paint quantities for a project, calculating in quarts and then converting to gallons helps you determine the most economical combination of can sizes to buy, since gallon pricing is almost always lower per quart than buying individual quart cans.
Water Storage and Emergency Preparedness
Emergency preparedness guidelines in the United States typically recommend storing one gallon of water per person per day — for drinking, food preparation, and basic hygiene. A family of four needs 4 gallons per day, or 28 gallons for a one-week emergency supply. Water is sold in 1-quart bottles, 1-gallon jugs, 2.5-gallon jugs, and 5-gallon containers. Converting between these formats — knowing that 5 gallons equals 20 quarts, or that 28 gallons equals 112 quart-sized bottles — helps with both purchasing planning and storage space estimation. Large water storage tanks for emergency preparedness are sold in gallon capacities of 30, 55, or 250 gallons.
Common Containers and Their Gallon and Quart Equivalents
| Application / Container | Gallons | Quarts | Notes |
| Standard milk jug (US) | 1 gal | 4 qt | Most common retail size in the US |
| Half-gallon milk carton | 0.5 gal | 2 qt | Common refrigerator staple |
| 1-quart mason jar / container | 0.25 gal | 1 qt | Standard canning and food storage jar |
| Small engine oil (car) | 1.25 gal (5 qt) | 5 qt | Typical 4-cylinder engine oil capacity |
| Paint (standard interior can) | 1 gal | 4 qt | Covers approx. 350–400 sq ft per coat |
| Paint (small project / sample) | 0.25 gal | 1 qt | For accent walls or small areas |
| Soup pot (large, 8-quart) | 2 gal | 8 qt | Standard stockpot capacity for batch cooking |
| Instant Pot 6-quart | 1.5 gal | 6 qt | Most popular size pressure cooker |
| Windshield washer fluid (US) | 1 gal | 4 qt | Standard US retail bottle size |
| 5-gallon water jug (office cooler) | 5 gal | 20 qt | Standard water cooler bottle size |
Converting Gallons and Quarts to Metric Units
From US Gallons and Quarts to Litres
When a recipe, product specification, or technical document requires converting between US customary volume and metric volume, the key conversion factors are:
1 US gallon = 3.78541 litres
1 US quart = 0.946353 litres (approximately 0.946 L or 946 mL)
Because 1 quart is one fourth of a gallon, the quart-to-litre conversion factor is exactly one fourth of the gallon-to-litre factor: 3.78541 ÷ 4 = 0.946353. This internal consistency makes metric conversion straightforward once you know either factor. For practical purposes: 1 quart is approximately 1 litre — close enough for many cooking purposes but not precise enough for chemistry, pharmaceuticals, or technical specifications where the 5.4% difference matters.
Final Thoughts
There are exactly 4 quarts in 1 gallon — always. To convert gallons to quarts, multiply by 4. To convert quarts to gallons, divide by 4. The conversion is exact, requires no decimal factors, and works at any scale. The one important caveat is to confirm whether you are working with US gallons or UK imperial gallons, since both have 4 quarts per gallon but the gallon itself is a different size: 3.785 litres in the US versus 4.546 litres in the UK. Use Intelligent Calculator’s free converter for instant results and to convert between gallons, quarts, pints, cups, fluid ounces, and litres in a single step.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many quarts are in a gallon?
There are exactly 4 quarts in 1 gallon. This is a fixed definition in the US customary system, not an approximation. To convert any gallon value to quarts, multiply by 4. For example: 3 gallons = 12 quarts, 5 gallons = 20 quarts, and 0.5 gallons = 2 quarts.
How many gallons is 12 quarts?
12 quarts equals 3 gallons. Divide the quart value by 4: 12 ÷ 4 = 3 gallons. This is the full quart-to-gallon formula: Gallons = Quarts ÷ 4.
How many quarts are in a half gallon?
There are 2 quarts in a half gallon. A half gallon is 0.5 gallons, and 0.5 × 4 = 2 quarts. This is why a standard half-gallon milk carton holds 2 quarts of milk — both labels describe the same volume.
Is a quart bigger than a pint?
Yes — a quart is larger than a pint. There are 2 pints in 1 quart. A pint contains 16 fluid ounces; a quart contains 32 fluid ounces. The hierarchy from smallest to largest is: fluid ounce → cup (8 fl oz) → pint (16 fl oz) → quart (32 fl oz) → gallon (128 fl oz).
What is the difference between a US gallon and a UK gallon?
A US gallon equals 3.785 litres. A UK imperial gallon equals 4.546 litres — approximately 20% larger. Both systems define 4 quarts per gallon, so the quarts-per-gallon ratio is the same, but a UK quart (1.137 L) is larger than a US quart (0.946 L). In practice, the UK now uses metric (litres) for most volume measurements, so imperial gallons appear mainly in older literature and some fuel economy comparisons.
How many quarts are in 5 gallons?
There are 20 quarts in 5 gallons. The calculation: 5 × 4 = 20. This is a commonly needed conversion for 5-gallon water jugs (20 quarts), 5-gallon paint buckets (20 quarts), and fuel cans. A 5-gallon bucket is one of the most standard large-volume containers in US construction, landscaping, and food service.
How do I convert quarts to litres?
1 US quart equals approximately 0.946 litres (946 millilitres). To convert quarts to litres, multiply the quart value by 0.946. For example: 4 quarts (1 gallon) = 4 × 0.946 = 3.785 litres. For practical cooking purposes, a quart is close enough to 1 litre to use as a rough estimate — but the actual difference is about 54 mL per quart, which matters in precise recipes or technical applications.
About This Converter
This guide is part of Intelligent Calculator’s Conversion suite — covering volume, weight, length, temperature, and unit conversions across US customary and metric systems. Free. No sign-up required.
