US fluid ounce to Cubic centimeter

us fl oz

1 us fl oz

cm³

29.5735295623627 cm³

Conversion History

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1 us fl oz (US fluid ounce) → 29.5735295623627 cm³ (Cubic centimeter)

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Quick Reference Table (US fluid ounce to Cubic centimeter)

US fluid ounce (us fl oz)Cubic centimeter (cm³)
0.514.78676478118135
129.5735295623627
1.544.36029434354405
8236.5882364989016
12354.8823547483524
16473.1764729978032
32946.3529459956064

About US fluid ounce (us fl oz)

The US fluid ounce (fl oz) is a unit of volume equal to approximately 29.574 milliliters, one sixteenth of a US liquid pint. It is the primary small-volume unit on US food labels, beverage cans, and pharmaceutical liquid measurements. A standard US soda can is 12 fl oz; a coffee shop "tall" is 12 fl oz; a standard shot is 1.5 fl oz. The US fluid ounce is distinct from the imperial fluid ounce (28.413 mL) and should not be confused with the ounce as a unit of mass.

A US soda can is 12 fl oz (355 mL). A US shot glass holds 1.5 fl oz (44 mL). A US water bottle is commonly 16.9 fl oz (500 mL).

About Cubic centimeter (cm³)

A cubic centimeter (cm³), also written as cc, is the volume of a cube with 1 cm sides, exactly equal to one milliliter (1 cm³ = 1 mL). It is used in medicine for drug dosing, in automotive engineering for engine displacement (a 125 cc scooter engine), and in everyday liquid measurement. The interchangeability of cm³ and mL means a 1 mL syringe and a 1 cc syringe are identical instruments. Engine displacement is expressed in cc for small engines and liters for larger ones (1,000 cc = 1 L).

A standard sugar cube is about 1 cm³. A 1 mL syringe holds exactly 1 cm³. A small motorcycle engine might displace 125 cc.


US fluid ounce – Frequently Asked Questions

A fluid ounce (fl oz) is a unit of volume; an ounce (oz) is a unit of mass/weight. One US fluid ounce of water happens to weigh approximately 1.04 avoirdupois ounces — close but not equal. For other liquids, the mass per fl oz varies with density.

There are exactly 8 US fluid ounces in one US cup (240 mL). A pint is 16 fl oz, a quart is 32 fl oz, and a gallon is 128 fl oz.

A US fluid ounce is approximately 29.574 mL; an imperial (UK) fluid ounce is approximately 28.413 mL — about 4% smaller. A US pint (16 fl oz) is 473 mL while a UK pint (20 fl oz) is 568 mL, a 20% difference that significantly affects beverage serving sizes.

The most common US bottled water size is 16.9 fl oz (500 mL). Other sizes include 8 fl oz (237 mL), 20 fl oz (591 mL), and 33.8 fl oz (1 liter).

A standard US restaurant wine pour is 5 fl oz (148 mL). A 750 mL wine bottle yields approximately 5 pours of 5 fl oz each.

Cubic centimeter – Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, 1 cubic centimeter (cm³) is exactly equal to 1 milliliter (mL). The two units are fully interchangeable. Medical syringes marked in mL and those marked in cc hold identical volumes.

In engines, cc stands for cubic centimeters and measures the total swept volume of all cylinders. A 125 cc engine has a piston displacement of 125 cm³ per cycle. Larger car engines are stated in liters: 1,000 cc = 1 L.

There are exactly 1,000 cubic centimeters in one liter. Since 1 cm³ = 1 mL, this also means 1,000 mL = 1 L — a fundamental metric relationship.

Historically, medical equipment used cubic centimeters before the milliliter became standard SI notation. Both are identical in volume. Most clinical guidelines now prefer mL, but cc persists in some specialties and syringe labeling.

A standard sugar cube, a fingertip, or a 1 mL syringe drawn full all represent roughly 1 cm³. A teaspoon holds approximately 5 cm³. A standard shot glass holds about 44 cm³.

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