One liter equals 2.11338 US pints. For UK (imperial) pints, 1 liter equals 1.75975 pints. The difference between US and UK pints is significant — a UK pint is approximately 20 percent larger than a US pint — so always confirm which pint standard a recipe or product label references before you begin converting.
The conversion factor is derived from the exact definition of the US liquid pint at 473.176473 milliliters and the liter at exactly 1,000 milliliters. Dividing 1,000 by 473.176473 gives the precise multiplier of 2.11338. For everyday use, rounding to 2.113 is accurate enough for cooking, brewing, and beverage portioning.
Common liters-to-US-pints conversions:
To reverse the conversion — pints to liters — multiply the number of US pints by 0.473176. For example, 6 US pints × 0.473176 = 2.839 liters. Our calculator above handles both directions automatically, so you can type a value into either field and see the result instantly.
The liter (symbol L or l) is the metric unit of volume equal to one cubic decimeter (1 dm³) or 1,000 cubic centimeters (1,000 cm³). It was first introduced in France in 1795 as part of the metric system and is now the global standard for measuring liquids in science, industry, and commerce. Countries that use the metric system — which includes virtually every nation except the United States, Myanmar, and Liberia — label beverages, fuels, and cooking ingredients in liters and milliliters.
The pint is an older unit of volume with roots in medieval England. The word comes from the Old French pinte, which is believed to derive from the Latin picta meaning "painted," referencing the mark painted on the side of a container to indicate the fill level. Today, two different pint standards survive:
Because the US fluid ounce (29.5735 mL) and the imperial fluid ounce (28.4131 mL) also differ, the gap between the two pint systems is even larger than the simple 16-versus-20 ounce count suggests. A UK pint holds roughly 20 percent more liquid than a US pint.
A third, rarely used unit is the US dry pint (550.610 mL), employed for measuring dry commodities like berries. This converter focuses on the US liquid pint, which is by far the most common usage in recipes, beverage labels, and everyday speech in the United States.
Converting liters to pints is straightforward once you know the multiplication factor. Follow these steps:
To convert in the opposite direction — pints to liters — divide the number of pints by the same factor, or equivalently multiply by the reciprocal (0.473176 for US pints, 0.568261 for UK pints).
A handy mental shortcut: one liter is roughly two pints (US). So if someone hands you a one-liter bottle of water and you need to know how many pints that is, the quick answer is "a little over two." For UK pints, the shortcut is even simpler: one liter is roughly 1¾ pints.
Understanding the liter-to-pint relationship is especially useful in the drinks industry. Here are real-world beverage sizes expressed in both units:
In craft brewing, recipes often list ingredient volumes in liters because the metric system simplifies scaling. A five-gallon homebrew batch is about 18.93 liters, which equals roughly 40 US pints — enough to fill 40 standard pint glasses. Converting accurately ensures your recipe yields the expected number of servings.
Cocktail bars that serve drinks in metric measurements can use this converter to translate liter-based spirit bottles into pint-based serving counts. A standard 750 mL spirit bottle provides approximately 1.585 US pints of liquid, which at a 44 mL (1.5 oz) pour yields about 17 drinks.
Recipes from different countries use different volume standards, which can lead to confusion in the kitchen. Here is a practical guide to navigating pint-to-liter discrepancies when cooking:
US recipes: When a US recipe calls for "1 pint" of stock, cream, or milk, it means 473 mL (0.473 L). Two cups in the US measuring system equal one US pint. A "quart" is two pints (946 mL), and a gallon is four quarts (3,785 mL or 3.785 L).
UK recipes: When a British recipe calls for "1 pint," it means 568 mL (0.568 L). This is roughly 20 percent more than a US pint. Using US pint measures for a British recipe will leave you short by almost 100 mL per pint — enough to noticeably affect soups, stews, and sauces.
Australian recipes: Australia uses the metric system. A "cup" in Australian cooking is 250 mL (compared to 236.6 mL for a US cup). Australian recipes rarely mention pints; they use milliliters and liters instead.
To avoid costly mistakes:
Common cooking volumes in both systems:
| Ingredient Measure | US Volume | Metric Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| 1 US cup | 8 fl oz / 0.5 US pt | 236.6 mL |
| 1 US pint | 16 fl oz / 2 cups | 473.2 mL |
| 1 US quart | 32 fl oz / 2 pt | 946.4 mL |
| 1 UK pint | 20 imp fl oz | 568.3 mL |
| 1 liter | ≈ 2.113 US pt | 1,000 mL |
The distinction between US and UK pints is one of the most common sources of measurement confusion for travelers, expatriates, and online shoppers. Here is a detailed comparison:
| Property | US Liquid Pint | UK Imperial Pint |
|---|---|---|
| Volume in mL | 473.176 | 568.261 |
| Volume in liters | 0.473176 | 0.568261 |
| Fluid ounces | 16 US fl oz | 20 imp fl oz |
| Size of 1 fl oz | 29.5735 mL | 28.4131 mL |
| Countries using | United States | UK, Ireland, parts of Commonwealth |
| Liters per pint | 0.473176 | 0.568261 |
| Pints per liter | 2.11338 | 1.75975 |
The size difference has practical implications. If you order a "pint of beer" in a London pub, you receive 568 mL. The same order in a New York bar yields only 473 mL — about 17 percent less. Many UK drinkers visiting the US feel short-changed, while Americans visiting British pubs get a pleasant surprise.
When shopping online for products measured in pints, always check the seller's country of origin. A "pint" of ice cream from a US brand (473 mL) is smaller than a "pint" label would suggest to a UK consumer. Similarly, UK milk is often sold in pint multiples (1 pint, 2 pints, 4 pints), where each pint is 568 mL.
Volume measurement has a fascinating history that spans thousands of years. Ancient civilizations measured liquids using containers of standardized sizes — the Egyptians used the hekat (about 4.8 liters), while the Romans used the sextarius (about 0.546 liters, remarkably close to a modern UK pint).
In medieval England, the pint was loosely defined and varied by region and commodity. A "pint of ale" might differ from a "pint of wine," which differed from a "pint of corn." The Winchester standards, established in the 15th century, brought some consistency, but it was not until the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824 that the imperial pint was formally defined as one-eighth of an imperial gallon (the volume of 10 pounds of water at 62°F).
The United States, having gained independence before 1824, retained the older English wine gallon as the basis for its liquid measures. This is why the US pint (one-eighth of the US gallon, based on the Queen Anne wine gallon of 231 cubic inches) is smaller than the imperial pint.
The liter was introduced during the French Revolution as part of the metric system in 1795. Originally defined as the volume of one kilogram of water at 4°C and standard atmospheric pressure, the liter was later redefined as exactly one cubic decimeter (1 dm³ = 0.001 m³) in 1964 by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM). This definition remains in effect today.
The global trend toward metrication means that pints are gradually disappearing from official use in many countries. However, pints remain culturally important in the UK (for beer and milk), the US (for all liquid measures), and Ireland. In Canada, the metric system is official, but many Canadians still informally use pints, especially for draft beer.
Beyond cooking and beverages, liter-to-pint conversions appear in many everyday and professional contexts:
2 liters × 2.11338 = 4.227 US pints. In UK imperial pints, 2 liters × 1.75975 = 3.520 pints. The two-liter soda bottle common in the US holds just over 4¼ US pints.
Yes. One liter equals 2.113 US pints or 1.760 UK pints, so a liter is larger than either type of pint. A liter is roughly double a US pint and about 1¾ of a UK pint.
One US liquid pint equals exactly 473.176473 milliliters. This is 16 US fluid ounces, where each fluid ounce is 29.5735 mL.
One UK imperial pint equals 568.261 milliliters. This is 20 imperial fluid ounces, where each imperial fluid ounce is 28.4131 mL. The UK pint is about 20% larger than the US pint.
Multiply the number of US pints by 0.473176 to get liters. For UK pints, multiply by 0.568261. For example, 5 US pints × 0.473176 = 2.366 liters. Five UK pints × 0.568261 = 2.841 liters.
The US pint is based on the pre-1824 English wine gallon (231 cubic inches), while the UK pint is based on the imperial gallon defined in 1824 (the volume of 10 pounds of water). The US inherited the older, smaller measure before Britain standardized to the larger imperial system.
There are 8 pints in both a US gallon and a UK gallon. However, because the pints themselves are different sizes, a US gallon (3.785 L) is smaller than a UK gallon (4.546 L).
500 mL = 0.5 liters = 1.057 US pints or 0.880 UK pints. A 500 mL bottle is very close to one US pint (which is 473 mL), making it a common "pint-sized" serving in many countries.
A US pint of beer is 0.473 liters (473 mL). A UK pint of beer is 0.568 liters (568 mL). Craft breweries selling in "pint" cans typically use the 473 mL US standard.
No. This converter uses the US liquid pint (473.176 mL). The US dry pint is 550.610 mL and is used for measuring dry commodities like berries. For dry pint conversions, divide liters by 0.550610.
Quick reference for liters to US pints. 1 liter = 2.11338 US pints. 1 UK pint = 0.568 liters.
| Liters | US Pints | UK Pints |
|---|---|---|
| 0.1 | 0.211 | 0.176 |
| 0.25 | 0.528 | 0.440 |
| 0.5 | 1.057 | 0.880 |
| 0.75 | 1.585 | 1.320 |
| 1 | 2.113 | 1.760 |
| 1.5 | 3.170 | 2.640 |
| 2 | 4.227 | 3.520 |
| 2.5 | 5.283 | 4.399 |
| 3 | 6.340 | 5.279 |
| 4 | 8.454 | 7.039 |
| 5 | 10.567 | 8.799 |
| 6 | 12.680 | 10.559 |
| 7 | 14.794 | 12.318 |
| 8 | 16.907 | 14.078 |
| 9 | 19.021 | 15.838 |
| 10 | 21.134 | 17.598 |
| 15 | 31.701 | 26.396 |
| 20 | 42.268 | 35.195 |
| 25 | 52.835 | 43.994 |
| 50 | 105.669 | 87.988 |
Reverse reference: convert US pints back to liters. Multiply US pints by 0.473176.
| US Pints | Liters |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0.237 |
| 1 | 0.473 |
| 2 | 0.946 |
| 3 | 1.420 |
| 4 | 1.893 |
| 5 | 2.366 |
| 6 | 2.839 |
| 8 | 3.785 |
| 10 | 4.732 |
| 12 | 5.678 |
| 16 | 7.571 |
| 20 | 9.464 |