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Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Converter 2026 | Free Flow Rate Tool
Flow Rate Conversion 2026

Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Converter

Accurate conversion between L/s and gal/s for civil engineering, hydrology, water treatment and industrial flow

Convert litres per second to gallons per second instantly with precise calculations. Supports both US and Imperial gallons. Includes reverse conversion, full formula reference, real-world flow rate examples, and comprehensive comparison tables for 2026.

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💧 Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Converter

Professional flow rate conversion for civil engineering, water treatment, hydrology, fire suppression, and large-scale industrial systems

✔ Accurate L/s to Gal/s Conversions

Convert litres per second to gallons per second using exact internationally defined factors: 1 US gallon = 3.785411784 litres and 1 Imperial gallon = 4.54609 litres exactly. Our tool outputs results in both US gallons per second and Imperial gallons per second simultaneously, along with cubic metres per second, cubic feet per second, and litres per minute, giving you a complete multi-unit flow rate breakdown in one step for 2026.

✔ US & Imperial Gallon Support

The US gallon and the Imperial (UK) gallon are fundamentally different units — a distinction that is critical in high-volume flow rate calculations. The US gallon is exactly 3.785411784 litres while the Imperial gallon is exactly 4.54609 litres, a difference of approximately 20%. Our converter clearly distinguishes both so you can use the correct value whether you are working with a US hydraulic design standard or a legacy UK water authority specification.

✔ Practical Applications

Litres per second (L/s) is the standard flow rate unit used in civil and hydraulic engineering, water supply design, wastewater treatment, and hydrology across Australia, Europe, and most of the world. Gallons per second (gal/s) is used primarily in the United States for high-volume hydraulic and fire suppression engineering. Accurate conversion between L/s and gal/s is essential when specifying pumps, pipes, treatment plant capacity, and dam spillway discharge across metric and US customary systems in 2026.

💧 Convert L/s to Gal/s

Select conversion direction and enter your flow rate value below

1 L/s = 0.264172 US gal/s = 0.219969 Imp gal/s
Select the gallon type used in your application
Enter US or Imperial gallons per second depending on your selection above
Gallons per Second
0
Equivalent flow rate

Complete Flow Rate Breakdown

Litres/sec (L/s)
0
US Gal/s
0
Imp Gal/s
0
m³/s
0
ft³/s (cusec)
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L/min
0

Step-by-Step Calculation

Input
US Gallon Factor ÷ 3.785411784 L/US gal
Imperial Gallon Factor ÷ 4.54609 L/Imp gal
Primary Result

What Is Litres per Second and How Does It Differ from Gallons per Second?

Litres per second (L/s) is a metric unit of volumetric flow rate measuring the volume of fluid passing a reference point per second, expressed in litres. It is the standard high-volume flow rate unit used in civil engineering, water supply infrastructure, river hydrology, wastewater treatment, and large pump station design across Australia, Europe, and most of the world. One litre per second equals 3.6 cubic metres per hour and 60 litres per minute, making it a convenient unit that bridges the gap between the very large m³/s (used for rivers and dam discharges) and the smaller L/min (used for household and small commercial flows).

Gallons per second (gal/s) is the US customary and Imperial equivalent, used primarily in North American hydraulic engineering, fire suppression system design, and large industrial flow specifications. As with all gallon-based conversions, a critical distinction must be made between the US gallon (3.785411784 litres exactly) and the Imperial gallon (4.54609 litres exactly) — a 20% difference that is highly significant at the large flow rates where L/s and gal/s are typically used. For related conversions, see the pressure converter for pump and hydraulic system design.

💧 Key Facts

1 L/s = 0.264172 US gal/s and 1 L/s = 0.219969 Imperial gal/s. At large industrial or civil engineering flow rates, this 20% difference between US and Imperial gallons becomes highly significant — always confirm which gallon system is used in any specification, standard, or equipment datasheet before applying the conversion.

Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Formula

The conversion between litres per second and gallons per second uses the exact internationally defined volume of each gallon. Because both the US gallon and Imperial gallon are defined in terms of litres with exact decimal values, the conversion factors carry no inherent rounding error in their base definitions.

💧 Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Formula

US gal/s = L/s ÷ 3.785411784
Imp gal/s = L/s ÷ 4.54609
L/s = US gal/s × 3.785411784
L/s = Imp gal/s × 4.54609
m³/s = L/s ÷ 1000
ft³/s (cusec) = L/s × 0.0353147

Example 1: 100 L/s ÷ 3.785411784 = 26.417 US gal/s
Example 2: 100 L/s ÷ 4.54609 = 21.997 Imp gal/s
Example 3: 50 US gal/s × 3.785411784 = 189.271 L/s

💧 Litres per Second to Gallons per Second — Visual Scale

1 L/s = 0.264 US gal/s
= 0.220 Imp gal/s
10 L/s = 2.642 US gal/s
= 2.200 Imp gal/s
100 L/s = 26.42 US gal/s
= 22.00 Imp gal/s
1,000 L/s = 264.2 US gal/s
= 220.0 Imp gal/s
1 L/s
0.264 US gps
5 L/s
1.321 US gps
10 L/s
2.642 US gps
100 L/s
26.42 US gps
1,000 L/s
264.2 US gps

Bar heights are proportional to illustrate relative flow rate values — US gal/s shown

Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Conversion Table 2026

Use this quick-reference table to look up common litres per second to gallons per second conversions. Values are shown for both US and Imperial gallons using exact conversion factors. For values not shown, use the calculator above.

Litres/sec (L/s) US Gal/s Imp Gal/s m³/s ft³/s (cusec)
0.1 L/s0.02642 US gal/s0.02200 Imp gal/s0.0001 m³/s0.003531 ft³/s
0.5 L/s0.13209 US gal/s0.10998 Imp gal/s0.0005 m³/s0.017657 ft³/s
1 L/s0.26417 US gal/s0.21997 Imp gal/s0.001 m³/s0.035315 ft³/s
5 L/s1.32086 US gal/s1.09985 Imp gal/s0.005 m³/s0.17657 ft³/s
10 L/s2.64172 US gal/s2.19969 Imp gal/s0.010 m³/s0.35315 ft³/s
25 L/s6.60430 US gal/s5.49923 Imp gal/s0.025 m³/s0.88287 ft³/s
50 L/s13.2086 US gal/s10.9985 Imp gal/s0.050 m³/s1.76573 ft³/s
100 L/s26.4172 US gal/s21.9969 Imp gal/s0.100 m³/s3.53147 ft³/s
250 L/s66.0430 US gal/s54.9923 Imp gal/s0.250 m³/s8.82867 ft³/s
500 L/s132.086 US gal/s109.985 Imp gal/s0.500 m³/s17.6573 ft³/s
1,000 L/s264.172 US gal/s219.969 Imp gal/s1.000 m³/s35.3147 ft³/s
5,000 L/s1,320.86 US gal/s1,099.85 Imp gal/s5.000 m³/s176.573 ft³/s

Low Flow (0.1 – 5 L/s)

0.1 L/s0.02642 US gal/s
0.5 L/s0.13209 US gal/s
1 L/s0.26417 US gal/s
5 L/s1.32086 US gal/s

Medium Flow (10 – 100 L/s)

10 L/s2.642 US gal/s
25 L/s6.604 US gal/s
50 L/s13.209 US gal/s
100 L/s26.417 US gal/s

High Flow (250 – 5,000 L/s)

250 L/s66.043 US gal/s
500 L/s132.086 US gal/s
1,000 L/s264.172 US gal/s
5,000 L/s1,320.86 US gal/s

Real-World Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Examples

Litres per second and gallons per second are used for high-volume flow rates in engineering and infrastructure. The following examples relate these units to familiar real-world systems encountered in civil and industrial engineering in 2026.

🚰 Water Main Supply

A typical residential water main supplying a suburb delivers approximately 50–200 L/s, equal to 13.2–52.8 US gal/s. Individual household connections draw around 0.1–0.3 L/s (0.026–0.079 US gal/s) at peak demand. Water utilities in Australia and Europe design supply systems in L/s while US water authorities use US gal/s — making accurate conversion essential for international infrastructure projects and equipment procurement in 2026.

🔥 Fire Suppression Systems

Commercial fire sprinkler systems are designed to deliver flow rates of 1–10 L/s (0.264–2.642 US gal/s) depending on hazard classification. Large fire hydrant systems for industrial facilities may require 30–100 L/s (7.9–26.4 US gal/s). US fire engineering standards (NFPA) specify flows in US gal/s or US gal/min, while Australian and European standards (AS, EN) use L/s — making this one of the most common L/s to gal/s conversion needs in building services engineering.

🌊 River & Stormwater Flow

Small urban creeks during heavy rain may flow at 5–50 L/s (1.32–13.2 US gal/s). Major rivers can discharge thousands of cubic metres per second — the Murray River in Australia has a mean discharge of approximately 767 m³/s = 767,000 L/s (202,629 US gal/s). Hydrologists and civil engineers use L/s for small catchment and drainage design, converting to and from US gal/s when comparing with North American hydrology data or international flood modelling standards.

💧 Water Treatment Plant

A small regional water treatment plant may process 100–500 L/s (26.4–132.1 US gal/s). A large metropolitan treatment plant serving a major city processes 2,000–10,000 L/s (528–2,642 US gal/s). Treatment plant capacity is universally specified in L/s in Australia, while US equivalents use millions of gallons per day (MGD) or US gal/s. Converting between these systems is essential for comparing international treatment technologies and equipment procurement.

⛽ Large Industrial Pump

Heavy-duty centrifugal pumps used in mining dewatering, process plants, and large irrigation schemes can deliver 500–5,000 L/s (132–1,321 US gal/s). Pump manufacturers publish performance curves in L/s for metric markets and US gal/s for North American markets. Hydraulic engineers must accurately convert these figures when selecting pumps from global suppliers or adapting US-designed pump stations for installation in Australian or European infrastructure projects.

🏊 Olympic Swimming Pool Fill Rate

An Olympic swimming pool holds 2,500,000 litres (2,500 m³). A typical pool fill rate from a large commercial supply connection of 10 L/s (2.642 US gal/s) would take approximately 69 hours (nearly 3 days) to fill. At a fire hydrant supply rate of 60 L/s (15.85 US gal/s) the same pool fills in about 11.6 hours. This example illustrates how L/s values translate to real-world volumes over time and why accurate L/s to gal/s conversion matters in water infrastructure planning.

Why Convert Litres per Second to Gallons per Second?

The L/s and gal/s units coexist in civil engineering, hydraulics, water management, and fire safety across the world. While most countries have adopted SI units and specify high-volume flow rates in L/s or m³/s, the United States continues to use US gal/s and US gal/min in hydraulic engineering, fire safety codes (NFPA), and water utility reporting. Anyone working across these jurisdictions regularly needs accurate L/s to gal/s conversion.

✅ Common Situations Requiring L/s to Gal/s Conversion

  • Civil engineering design — converting Australian L/s pipe and pump specifications to US gal/s for international project documentation
  • Fire safety compliance — converting NFPA US gal/s sprinkler flow requirements to L/s for Australian AS standards
  • Water treatment — comparing treatment plant capacity between L/s (metric) and US gal/s or MGD (US) specifications
  • Pump procurement — converting US gal/s pump performance curves to L/s for Australian or European specifications
  • Hydrology & flood modelling — comparing river flow data between metric (m³/s, L/s) and US (cusec = ft³/s, gal/s) systems
  • Mining & resources — converting dewatering pump flow rates between global suppliers using different unit systems

⚠️ Critical Mistake to Avoid — US vs Imperial Gallons

  • Always specify which gallon you are using — the US gallon (3.785 L) and Imperial gallon (4.546 L) differ by ~20%; at large flow rates like 1,000 L/s this error equals ~44 gal/s — a significant sizing mistake
  • US gallon — used in all US engineering standards, NFPA fire codes, and North American equipment datasheets
  • Imperial gallon — appears in older UK, Australian, and some Commonwealth engineering documents; rarely used in modern metric specifications
  • Never assume — always check the country of origin of any specification before applying a gal/s conversion factor

How to Use the Litres per Second to Gallons per Second Converter

Our L/s to gal/s converter delivers instant, accurate results on any device. Follow these simple steps to convert your flow rate value in seconds.

  • Step 1: Select your conversion direction — "L/s → Gal/s" or "Gal/s → L/s" using the tabs at the top of the calculator
  • Step 2: If converting gal/s to L/s, select whether you are using US gallons or Imperial gallons from the dropdown
  • Step 3: Type your flow rate value into the input field — decimals are fully supported (e.g., 37.5 L/s)
  • Step 4: Click the green Convert button or press Enter on your keyboard
  • Step 5: Read your results — the main value shows gal/s (or L/s), and the breakdown grid shows US gal/s, Imperial gal/s, m³/s, ft³/s (cusec), and L/min simultaneously

Frequently Asked Questions — L/s to Gal/s

How many gallons per second is 1 litre per second?
1 litre per second equals 0.264172 US gallons per second or 0.219969 Imperial gallons per second. The US gallon equals 3.785411784 litres exactly, so 1 L/s ÷ 3.785411784 = 0.264172 US gal/s. The Imperial gallon equals 4.54609 litres exactly, so 1 L/s ÷ 4.54609 = 0.219969 Imp gal/s. Always confirm which gallon system is relevant to your engineering specification before applying either conversion factor.
How do I convert L/s to gal/s manually?
To convert litres per second to US gallons per second, divide the L/s value by 3.785411784. For example: 50 L/s ÷ 3.785411784 = 13.209 US gal/s. To convert to Imperial gallons per second, divide by 4.54609. For example: 50 L/s ÷ 4.54609 = 10.999 Imp gal/s. To reverse (gal/s to L/s), multiply by the respective factor: 13.209 US gal/s × 3.785411784 = 50.0 L/s.
What is a cusec and how does it relate to L/s?
A cusec is one cubic foot per second (ft³/s), a flow rate unit used predominantly in US and Indian hydrology and irrigation engineering. 1 ft³/s = 28.3168 L/s exactly, and conversely 1 L/s = 0.035315 ft³/s. The cusec is commonly used in river flow measurement, dam discharge, and large irrigation canal design in the US, where large flows are expressed in hundreds or thousands of cusecs. Our calculator includes ft³/s (cusec) in its output breakdown for users working across these systems.
How many litres per second is 100 gallons per second?
100 US gallons per second equals 378.541 litres per second (100 × 3.785411784 = 378.541 L/s). 100 Imperial gallons per second equals 454.609 litres per second (100 × 4.54609 = 454.609 L/s). These are very high flow rates equivalent to a large water main or industrial pump station — 378.5 L/s equals 1,362,706 L/hr or approximately 378.5 tonnes of water per second (since water density ≈ 1 kg/L).
How do I convert L/s to L/min or L/hr?
To convert litres per second to litres per minute, multiply by 60 (since there are 60 seconds in a minute). For example: 10 L/s × 60 = 600 L/min. To convert L/s to litres per hour, multiply by 3,600 (60 seconds × 60 minutes). For example: 10 L/s × 3,600 = 36,000 L/hr. These conversions are useful when comparing pump specifications that may be rated in L/s (civil engineering), L/min (HVAC and plumbing), or L/hr (process and irrigation).
What is the relationship between L/s and m³/s?
The relationship between litres per second and cubic metres per second is exact: 1 m³/s = 1,000 L/s, because 1 cubic metre = 1,000 litres by definition. To convert L/s to m³/s, divide by 1,000. For example: 500 L/s ÷ 1,000 = 0.5 m³/s. To convert m³/s to L/s, multiply by 1,000. The m³/s unit is used for very large flows — major rivers, dam spillways, and ocean currents — while L/s is more practical for water mains, pump stations, and treatment plants at the scale of hundreds or low thousands of L/s.
How is L/s used in Australian fire safety standards?
In Australia, fire sprinkler system design follows standards such as AS 2118, which specifies water supply flow rates in litres per second (L/s) and pressures in kilopascals (kPa). For example, a light hazard sprinkler system may require a minimum water supply of 1.0 L/s at 70 kPa. When importing fire suppression equipment from the US, where NFPA standards specify flows in US gal/min, engineers must convert: 1 L/s = 15.850 US gal/min. Converting from US gal/s to L/s (by multiplying by 3.785) allows direct comparison with Australian design flow requirements.

Flow Rate & Hydraulic Engineering Resources

📚 NIST Unit Definitions

The National Institute of Standards and Technology provides the official US gallon definition (3.785411784 L) and other volume units used as the reference standard for this converter and all official US engineering calculations.

View NIST Reference →

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