Gallons per 100 miles (US) to Miles (US) per liter
gal/100mi (US)
miles/L
Conversion History
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Quick Reference Table (Gallons per 100 miles (US) to Miles (US) per liter)
| Gallons per 100 miles (US) (gal/100mi (US)) | Miles (US) per liter (miles/L) |
|---|---|
| 1.5 | 0.02192333490680641597 |
| 2 | 0.02923111320907522129 |
| 2.5 | 0.03653889151134402661 |
| 3 | 0.04384666981361283194 |
| 4 | 0.05846222641815044258 |
| 5 | 0.07307778302268805323 |
| 6.7 | 0.09792422925040199133 |
About Gallons per 100 miles (US) (gal/100mi (US))
Gallons per 100 miles (US) — abbreviated gal/100mi — is a consumption metric, the American analogue to the European L/100km standard. Lower is better. It is the mathematical inverse of US mpg multiplied by 100. The US EPA introduced the GPM metric alongside mpg to help consumers make better fuel economy comparisons: because mpg is non-linear, the true fuel saving from improving a 15 mpg truck to 20 mpg (1.67 gal/100mi saved) is far larger than improving a 40 mpg car to 50 mpg (0.5 gal/100mi saved). GPM makes this intuitively clear by expressing absolute consumption rather than efficiency.
A 25 mpg family sedan consumes 4 gal/100mi. A 50 mpg hybrid uses only 2 gal/100mi — saving as much fuel per mile as the difference from 10 to 50 mpg on a low-efficiency vehicle.
About Miles (US) per liter (miles/L)
Miles (US) per liter is a hybrid unit combining the US statute mile with the metric liter. It does not correspond to any standard national fuel economy reporting system but appears in engineering calculations, conversion utilities, and contexts where US distance and metric volume data are mixed. One US mpg equals approximately 0.4251 miles per liter. The unit is most useful for intermediate steps when converting between L/100km and US mpg without requiring a full formula — a rough mental benchmark of 12 miles per liter corresponds to about 28 US mpg or 8.3 L/100km.
A car achieving 30 US mpg travels approximately 12.7 miles per liter. A 50 mpg hybrid covers about 21.2 miles per liter of fuel consumed.
Gallons per 100 miles (US) – Frequently Asked Questions
Why did the EPA start showing gallons per 100 miles on window stickers?
Research by Duke University professors showed that mpg systematically misleads consumers about fuel savings. The EPA added gal/100mi to Monroney stickers starting in 2013 to give buyers a linear, comparable number. A 1 gal/100mi difference always represents the same fuel saving regardless of starting point.
How does gal/100mi help compare plug-in hybrids that switch between fuel and electricity?
Plug-in hybrids complicate mpg because they drive some miles on electricity and some on petrol. Gal/100mi lets you weight the two modes transparently: if a PHEV uses 0 gallons for its first 40 electric miles and 2.5 gal/100mi after that, fleet managers can model exact fuel costs for any commute length. The EPA's MPGe tries to do something similar for consumers, but gal/100mi is more intuitive for mixed-mode budgeting.
What gal/100mi does the average American car use?
The average new car in the US uses about 3–4 gal/100mi (25–33 mpg). Full-size trucks sit around 5–7 gal/100mi, while hybrids achieve 1.5–2.5 gal/100mi. Electric vehicles show 0 gal/100mi but have a separate kWh/100mi rating.
Why do long-haul trucking companies obsess over fractions of a gal/100mi?
A Class 8 semi averages about 6.5 gal/100mi and covers 100,000+ miles per year — roughly 6,500 gallons annually. Shaving just 0.3 gal/100mi through aerodynamic fairings, low-rolling-resistance tires, or driver coaching saves ~300 gallons per truck per year. Across a 5,000-truck fleet, that is 1.5 million gallons saved — worth over $5 million at US diesel prices. At that scale, every tenth of a gal/100mi is a budget line item.
Why do Europeans never use gal/100mi even though they use L/100km?
Europeans adopted L/100km as their native metric from the start, so there was never a need for an alternative. Gal/100mi was invented specifically to fix the mpg illusion problem in the US. Europeans already had the "right" unit — they just used metric volumes and distances.
Miles (US) per liter – Frequently Asked Questions
When would I ever need miles per liter as a unit?
It comes up when you buy fuel in liters but measure distance in miles — common for Americans driving in Canada or Mexico, or British drivers who use miles but buy fuel priced per liter. It is also a useful intermediate step when converting between US mpg and L/100km.
How do I convert miles per liter to US mpg?
Multiply miles per liter by 3.785 (the number of liters in a US gallon). So 10 miles per liter equals 37.85 US mpg. For UK mpg, multiply by 4.546 instead.
Is miles per liter used officially in any country?
No country uses miles per liter as its official fuel economy standard. It is a cross-system hybrid that exists purely for convenience. Countries either use km/L (Japan, India), L/100km (EU, Australia), or mpg with their local gallon (US, UK).
What miles per liter does a typical American car get?
The average new US car achieves about 7–10 miles per liter (roughly 26–38 US mpg). A full-size pickup truck manages around 5–6 miles per liter, while a Toyota Prius hybrid pushes 15+ miles per liter.
Why is fuel in Canada sold in liters but distances shown in kilometers, not miles?
Canada fully adopted the metric system in the 1970s, so both fuel and distance are metric — Canadians use L/100km, not miles per liter. The miles-per-liter scenario mainly affects Americans crossing into Canada who still think in miles but face liter-priced pumps.