Imperial gallon to Imperial tablespoon

imp gal

1 imp gal

imp tbsp

256.00000000090917056196 imp tbsp

Conversion History

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1 imp gal (Imperial gallon) → 256.00000000090917056196 imp tbsp (Imperial tablespoon)

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Quick Reference Table (Imperial gallon to Imperial tablespoon)

Imperial gallon (imp gal)Imperial tablespoon (imp tbsp)
0.5128.00000000045458528098
1256.00000000090917056196
2512.00000000181834112392
51,280.00000000454585280981
102,560.00000000909170561962
5012,800.00000004545852809812

About Imperial gallon (imp gal)

The imperial gallon is a unit of volume defined as exactly 4.54609 liters, used in the United Kingdom, Canada, and some Commonwealth nations. It is approximately 20% larger than the US liquid gallon. Fuel economy in the UK is expressed in miles per imperial gallon. The imperial gallon divides into 8 imperial pints, each of 568 mL. The UK officially metricated fuel sales to liters in the 1980s–1990s, but miles per imperial gallon remains the legal unit for new car fuel economy labels.

UK car fuel economy figures are expressed in miles per imperial gallon. One imperial gallon equals 8 standard UK pints of beer.

About Imperial tablespoon (imp tbsp)

The imperial tablespoon is a unit of volume equal to approximately 17.758 milliliters, defined as five-eighths of an imperial fluid ounce. It is used in older UK and Commonwealth cooking recipes. The imperial tablespoon is larger than the US tablespoon (14.787 mL) but smaller than the Australian tablespoon (20 mL). Modern British and Commonwealth recipes have replaced it with the 15 mL metric tablespoon, but it persists in pre-metrication cookbooks.

Older British recipe books specify tablespoons of approximately 17.8 mL — larger than a US tablespoon but smaller than an Australian one.


Imperial gallon – Frequently Asked Questions

One imperial gallon is defined as exactly 4.54609 liters — approximately 20% more than the US liquid gallon (3.785 L).

The UK switched fuel sales to liters in the 1990s. However, miles per gallon (imperial) remains the legal unit for car fuel economy on new vehicle labels. Road speed is in mph and distances are in miles, so imperial gallons remain embedded in UK motoring.

UK MPG uses the imperial gallon (4.546 L); US MPG uses the US gallon (3.785 L). Multiply UK MPG by 0.832 to get US MPG. A car rated 40 UK MPG ≈ 33 US MPG.

There are exactly 8 imperial pints in one imperial gallon. Each imperial pint is 568 mL, compared to 473 mL for a US pint.

Canada officially metricated in the 1970s and fuel is sold in liters. However, some older Canadians and certain agricultural contexts still reference imperial gallons informally. Canadian and UK imperial gallons are identical (4.54609 L).

Imperial tablespoon – Frequently Asked Questions

One imperial tablespoon equals approximately 17.758 mL — larger than the US tablespoon (14.79 mL) and smaller than the Australian tablespoon (20 mL). Modern UK metric tablespoons are standardized at 15 mL.

Leavening failure. Baking powder and baking soda are measured in tablespoons, and the difference between a US tablespoon (14.8 mL), an imperial tablespoon (17.8 mL), and an Australian tablespoon (20 mL) is 15–35%. Too much baking soda makes bread taste metallic and soapy; too little and it does not rise. A British grandmother's scone recipe used in an American kitchen with US tablespoons will under-leaven by 20%. Professional bakers avoid this entirely by weighing leavening agents in grams.

No. Modern UK cooking uses 15 mL metric tablespoons. The imperial tablespoon (17.76 mL) appears only in pre-1970s British cookbooks.

One imperial tablespoon equals 3 imperial teaspoons (each ≈ 5.92 mL), giving 3 × 5.92 = 17.76 mL. The same 3:1 ratio as in US and metric systems, though the absolute sizes differ.

The Australian tablespoon is 20 mL — the largest of the major English-language cooking tablespoons. Australian recipes therefore use fewer tablespoon counts than US or UK recipes for the same volume.

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