Kiloliter to Decaliter

kl

1 kl

dal

100 dal

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Quick Reference Table (Kiloliter to Decaliter)

Kiloliter (kl)Decaliter (dal)
0.110
0.550
1100
5500
101,000
505,000

About Kiloliter (kl)

A kiloliter (kL) is 1,000 liters, exactly equal to one cubic meter (m³). It is used in water utility billing, industrial liquid storage, and large-scale liquid processing. Household water consumption is measured and billed in kiloliters by water utilities in Australia and South Africa. Industrial tanks, fuel storage, and tanker truck capacities are commonly expressed in kiloliters. One kiloliter of water has a mass of one metric tonne (1,000 kg).

An average Australian household uses about 200 kL of water per year. A standard road tanker truck holds 15–30 kL.

About Decaliter (dal)

A decaliter (daL) is ten liters, a metric unit used in brewing, winemaking, and fuel distribution where single-liter precision is unnecessary but kiloliter scale is excessive. Common in European agricultural contexts — grain harvests, wine production statistics, and fuel depot transfers. Home brewers and small winemakers often work in decaliter batches (10–50 daL), and a standard wine barrel holds 22.5 daL (225 L).

A small homebrew batch is typically 1–5 daL (10–50 L). A standard wine barrel holds roughly 22.5 daL (225 L).


Kiloliter – Frequently Asked Questions

An average Australian household uses about 0.5–0.6 kL (500–600 liters) per day, or roughly 200 kL per year. A US household averages higher at about 1.1 kL/day (300 gallons). The biggest daily consumers are showers (60–80 L each), toilet flushes (6–12 L each), and washing machines (50–100 L per load). A leaking toilet can waste 0.5 kL per day unnoticed. Water-efficient homes in drought-prone regions like Cape Town have achieved under 0.2 kL/day per household.

One kiloliter of pure water weighs approximately 1,000 kg (one metric tonne) at standard conditions.

Australia adopted kiloliters for water billing as it aligns with metric measurement. The average Australian home uses 150–250 kL per year, making the kL a practical household-scale unit.

Road tanker trucks typically carry 15–34 kL of liquid, depending on road weight limits and the liquid's density. Milk tankers commonly carry 20–30 kL; petrol tankers 25–34 kL.

One kiloliter equals approximately 264.2 US liquid gallons. A typical backyard swimming pool holds 40–80 kL (10,000–20,000 US gallons).

Decaliter – Frequently Asked Questions

A decaliter (daL) is a metric unit equal to 10 liters. The prefix deca- means ten in the SI system. It sits between the liter and the hectoliter (100 L) in the metric volume scale.

The decaliter is used in European brewing, winemaking, and agricultural contexts. Home brewers use it for batch sizes (1–5 daL), and some agricultural fuel systems dispense in decaliters.

A standard Bordeaux barrel (barrique) holds 225 liters = 22.5 daL. A Burgundy barrel holds 228 liters = 22.8 daL. American oak bourbon barrels typically hold 200 L = 20 daL.

One decaliter equals approximately 2.642 US liquid gallons. A 10-daL batch is roughly 26 US gallons — a typical homebrew fermentation vessel size.

The decaliter uses the SI prefix deca- (10×), so it is a recognized metric unit. However, the hectoliter (100 L) and liter (1 L) are far more commonly used in practice.

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