Gallons to Liters Calculator for Lawn Sprayers โ€” Sprayer Volume Converter (2026)
๐Ÿ“Š Conversion constants and safety guidance cross-checked with NIST conversion tables, EPA pesticide labeling resources, extension pesticide-label training, and common sprayer calibration formulas. This page is rewritten for 2026 and designed for lawn herbicide, pesticide, fungicide, and liquid fertilizer tank mixing.

Convert sprayer volumes, mixing ratios, and application rates between US, imperial, and metric units instantly.

โœ“
7 volume units โ€” US gal, imp gal, liters, fl oz, ml, pints, quarts.
โœ“
Mixing ratio calculator โ€” oz per gallon to ml per liter conversion.
โœ“
Tank fill calculator โ€” how much concentrate for your tank size.
โœ“
Application rate converter โ€” gal/acre to L/hectare and back.
โœ“
Popular sprayer tank sizes โ€” 1, 2, 4, 15, 25, 50 gallon presets.
โœ“
Instant all-unit output โ€” see every conversion simultaneously.
Key Sprayer Conversion Facts: 1 US gallon = 3.785 liters = 128 fl oz
1 Imperial gallon = 4.546 liters = 160 fl oz
1 liter = 0.264 US gallons = 33.81 fl oz
1 fl oz/gal = 7.81 ml/L | 1 gal/acre = 9.35 L/ha
๐Ÿ“– Sprayer Guide

Lawn Sprayer Volume Conversions Explained for 2026

The most common sprayer conversion needed by homeowners is US gallons to liters. A standard 4-gallon backpack sprayer holds 15.14 liters. A 2-gallon pump sprayer holds 7.57 liters. Understanding this conversion is essential when buying herbicides, pesticides, or liquid fertilizers labeled in metric units โ€” particularly products imported from Europe, Australia, or Canada, which show mixing rates in ml per liter rather than fl oz per gallon.

The mixing ratio conversion is the most practically important calculation. If a herbicide label says "2 fl oz per gallon", that equals 15.63 ml per liter. For a 4-gallon backpack sprayer (15.14 liters), you need 2 fl oz ร— 4 gallons = 8 fl oz of concentrate, or equivalently 15.63 ml/L ร— 15.14 L = 236.6 ml. Both calculations give the same result โ€” the Tab 2 Mix Ratio calculator above handles this automatically.

Application rate conversion โ€” gallons per acre vs liters per hectare โ€” is critical for calibrating boom sprayers and calculating product needed for large areas. The conversion factor is 1 gal/acre = 9.354 L/ha. A product labeled at 44 gallons per acre equals 411.6 liters per hectare. For homeowners working in sq ft: 1 gal/acre = 0.00229 gallons per sq ft = 0.293 fl oz per 1,000 sq ft.

๐Ÿ’ก US Gallon vs Imperial Gallon โ€” Don't Mix Them Up

A US gallon (3.785 liters) and an Imperial gallon (4.546 liters) are NOT the same volume โ€” there's a 20% difference. Herbicide and pesticide mixing errors from confusing these two units can result in under-dosing (ineffective treatment) or over-dosing (crop/turf damage and chemical waste). Always check whether a product label specifies US gallons or Imperial gallons. Products sold in the US, Canada (older labels), and some Caribbean countries use US gallons. UK, Australia, and older Commonwealth products may specify Imperial gallons.

Common Sprayer Tank Sizes in Liters

  • 1 US gallon hand sprayer: 3.79 liters โ€” spot treatment, small areas
  • 2 US gallon pump sprayer: 7.57 liters โ€” small lawn, patio weeds
  • 4 US gallon backpack sprayer: 15.14 liters โ€” most common homeowner tank
  • 4-liter backpack (metric): 1.06 US gallons โ€” common UK/European tank
  • 15 US gallon ATV tank: 56.78 liters โ€” small acreage applications
  • 25 US gallon pull sprayer: 94.64 liters โ€” larger lawn and pasture
  • 50 US gallon trailer sprayer: 189.3 liters โ€” professional / large area

โš ๏ธ Always Measure Concentrate Accurately

Under-dosing herbicides results in poor weed control and resistance development. Over-dosing can damage turf, harm beneficial insects, create chemical runoff, and violate pesticide label laws (applying at rates higher than the label is illegal in the US). Use a dedicated measuring cup for pesticide mixing โ€” never estimate. For small amounts under 1 fl oz, use a graduated syringe or measuring spoon (1 teaspoon = 4.93 ml, 1 tablespoon = 14.79 ml).

Reading Herbicide Label Mixing Rates

  • "2 fl oz per gallon" โ€” multiply by your tank size in gallons to get total fl oz of concentrate.
  • "15 ml per liter" โ€” multiply by your tank size in liters to get total ml of concentrate.
  • "1:50 ratio" โ€” divide tank volume by 50 to get concentrate amount (same unit as tank).
  • "4% solution" โ€” multiply tank volume by 0.04 to get concentrate needed.
  • "1 oz per 1,000 sq ft in 1 gallon water" โ€” calibrate sprayer output per sq ft first, then scale concentrate accordingly.

๐Ÿ’ง US Gallon to Liter Conversion Table

US GallonsLitersFl Oz
0.5 gal1.893 L64 fl oz
1 gal3.785 L128 fl oz
2 gal7.571 L256 fl oz
4 gal15.14 L512 fl oz
5 gal18.93 L640 fl oz
15 gal56.78 L1,920 fl oz
25 gal94.64 L3,200 fl oz
50 gal189.3 L6,400 fl oz

๐Ÿงช Mix Rate: fl oz/gal โ†’ ml/L

Label Rateml per LiterCommon Use
0.5 fl oz/gal3.91 ml/LMild fungicide
1 fl oz/gal7.81 ml/LStandard herbicide
1.5 fl oz/gal11.72 ml/LBroadleaf control
2 fl oz/gal15.63 ml/LGlyphosate typical
3 fl oz/gal23.44 ml/LHeavy treatment
4 fl oz/gal31.25 ml/LMax label rate
6 fl oz/gal46.88 ml/LStump / brush kill

๐ŸŒฟ Application Rate: gal/acre โ†’ L/ha

Gal/AcreL/HectareL/1,000 sq ft
10 gal/ac93.5 L/ha0.23 L
20 gal/ac187.1 L/ha0.46 L
44 gal/ac411.6 L/ha1.01 L
100 gal/ac935.4 L/ha2.30 L

1 gal/acre = 9.354 L/ha = 0.0229 gal/1,000 sq ft

๐Ÿงช 2026 Mixing Workflow

How to Use Gallons to Liters Conversions for Lawn Chemicals

A volume converter is only useful when it helps you mix the correct amount of product. The safest workflow is: convert the tank size first, convert the label rate second, then calculate concentrate based on the actual tank volume you plan to spray.

Step 1 โ€” Identify the gallon standard on the label

Most lawn products sold in the United States use US gallons. A US gallon equals 3.785 liters and contains 128 US fluid ounces. Some older or international labels may refer to an Imperial gallon, which equals 4.546 liters and is about 20% larger than a US gallon. This difference matters: mixing a product intended for Imperial gallons into a US-gallon sprayer can under-apply the active ingredient, while doing the reverse can over-apply it.

For common homeowner sprayers, the quick conversions are simple. A 1-gallon sprayer is 3.79 liters, a 2-gallon pump sprayer is 7.57 liters, and a 4-gallon backpack sprayer is 15.14 liters. When a metric label says โ€œ10 ml per liter,โ€ a 4-gallon backpack needs about 151 ml of concentrate. When a US label says โ€œ2 fl oz per gallon,โ€ that same 4-gallon backpack needs 8 fl oz, or about 237 ml.

Step 2 โ€” Convert the label rate, not the finished tank

Many mixing mistakes happen because users convert the final water volume but forget to convert the concentrate rate. The reliable conversion is: 1 fl oz per US gallon equals 7.8125 ml per liter. So 2 fl oz per gallon equals 15.625 ml per liter. A label rate of 1 tablespoon per gallon is about 3.91 ml per liter, because one US tablespoon is 14.79 ml.

Never round aggressively for small tanks. Rounding 0.5 fl oz up to 1 fl oz doubles the concentration. For small spot sprayers, use a syringe, dosing cup, or graduated beaker. For large ATV or tow-behind tanks, use ounces, cups, quarts, or liters depending on the size of the required concentrate amount.

Step 3 โ€” Calibrate the sprayer before scaling to the lawn

Tank volume tells you how much solution you can carry, but calibration tells you how much area that tank will cover. Two people using the same 4-gallon sprayer can cover very different areas if one walks faster, uses a different nozzle, or pumps at a different pressure. For broadcast lawn applications, mark a known area such as 1,000 sq ft, spray it with plain water at your normal pace, then measure how much water was used. That volume becomes your personal gallons-per-1,000-sq-ft output.

Once your output is known, product math becomes simple. If your sprayer uses 1 gallon per 1,000 sq ft and your label says 2 fl oz per gallon, each 1,000 sq ft receives 2 fl oz of concentrate. If your sprayer uses 0.5 gallon per 1,000 sq ft, you may need to adjust the mix or application plan according to the labelโ€™s allowed carrier volume. Always let the product label control the final decision.

โœ… Best Practice: Keep a Sprayer Mixing Log

Write down the product, date, tank size, label rate, nozzle used, walking speed, weather, and area treated. The next time you spray the same product, you can repeat the successful mix without guessing. This also helps prevent accidental double-treatment of the same lawn area.

๐Ÿ” Common 2026 Lawn Sprayer Conversions

NeedUse This ConversionExample
Tank sizeUS gal ร— 3.785 = liters4 gal = 15.14 L
Metric tank to USLiters รท 3.785 = US gal15 L = 3.96 gal
Label ratefl oz/gal ร— 7.8125 = ml/L2 fl oz/gal = 15.63 ml/L
Application volumegal/ac ร— 9.354 = L/ha20 gal/ac = 187.1 L/ha
Small dose1 tsp = 4.93 ml2 tsp = 9.86 ml
Large dose1 qt = 32 fl oz = 946 ml1 qt โ‰ˆ 0.946 L

โš ๏ธ Conversion Does Not Override the Product Label

This calculator converts units. It does not decide the legal pesticide rate, crop/site restriction, retreatment interval, personal protective equipment, rainfast period, or maximum annual amount. Those details come from the current product label.

๐Ÿงด Measuring Tool Accuracy

ToolBest ForAvoid
Graduated syringe1โ€“30 ml dosesThick products that clog
Medicine cup10โ€“60 ml dosesHigh-volume tank mixes
Dedicated measuring cup1โ€“16 fl ozFood use afterward
Quart pitcherLarge ATV tanksTiny herbicide doses
โš ๏ธ Label Safety

Mixing Lawn Sprays Safely: Units, Labels, and Common Mistakes

The biggest sprayer mistakes are rarely math-only problems. Most come from mixing the wrong unit, using the wrong gallon standard, failing to agitate the tank, or treating without calibrating coverage.

1. Convert before you pour

Do the math before opening the concentrate. Write the final amount on paper or on painterโ€™s tape stuck to the sprayer. This prevents mid-mix confusion when wearing gloves or working outside in wind.

2. Fill tank halfway first

For most liquid products, fill the sprayer halfway with clean water, add measured concentrate, agitate, then top off to final volume. This improves mixing and reduces splash risk.

3. Do not use kitchen tools

Use measuring tools dedicated only to lawn chemicals. Never return a measuring cup, spoon, syringe, or funnel to food use after measuring pesticide or herbicide concentrate.

4. Watch temperature and wind

Even a perfect conversion can fail in poor weather. Avoid spraying in high wind, during temperature extremes, before heavy rain, or when desirable plants are downwind from the spray path.

US label example: ounces per gallon

A common homeowner herbicide label might say โ€œmix 2 fl oz in 1 gallon of water.โ€ For a 2-gallon sprayer, the mix is 4 fl oz. For a 4-gallon backpack, the mix is 8 fl oz. In metric, 8 fl oz is about 237 ml. The carrier water is not the treatment rate by itself; the area covered by that tank still depends on your sprayer calibration.

Metric label example: milliliters per liter

A metric fungicide label might say โ€œuse 12 ml per liter.โ€ For a 15-liter backpack sprayer, the concentrate is 180 ml. If your sprayer is labeled in US gallons, 15 liters is 3.96 gallons. This is why the calculator shows both directions: you may know the tank in gallons but the product in milliliters, or the tank in liters but the product in fluid ounces.

Application rate example: gallons per acre

Professional labels and sprayer calibration charts often use gallons per acre. A 20 gal/ac output equals about 187 L/ha and about 0.46 gal per 1,000 sq ft. A 44 gal/ac output equals about 412 L/ha and almost exactly 1 gallon per 1,000 sq ft. Once you understand those equivalents, it becomes easier to compare backpack, boom, and tow-behind sprayer recommendations.

SEO note for homeowners: This page intentionally covers โ€œgallons to liters,โ€ โ€œliters to gallons,โ€ โ€œfluid ounces to milliliters,โ€ โ€œoz per gallon to ml per liter,โ€ and โ€œgallons per acre to liters per hectareโ€ because real sprayer labels use all of these formats.
๐Ÿ“Š Examples

Sprayer Conversion โ€” 6 Worked Examples

Real-world mixing calculations for common lawn sprayer applications using 2026 product label rates.

Backpack

4-Gal Backpack โ€” Herbicide at 2 fl oz/gal

Tank size4 gal / 15.14 L
Label rate2 fl oz per gal
Concentrate needed8 fl oz
In metric236.6 ml
โœ… Add to tank8 fl oz concentrate
Hand Sprayer

1-Gal Pump โ€” Fungicide at 1 fl oz/gal

Tank size1 gal / 3.785 L
Label rate1 fl oz per gal
Concentrate needed1 fl oz
In metric29.57 ml
โœ… Add to tank1 fl oz (2 tbsp)
Metric Label

15-Liter EU Backpack โ€” 10 ml/L Rate

Tank size15 L / 3.96 gal
Label rate10 ml per liter
Concentrate needed150 ml
In US units5.07 fl oz
โœ… Add to tank150 ml concentrate
ATV Sprayer

15-Gal ATV โ€” Weed Killer at 1.5 fl oz/gal

Tank size15 gal / 56.78 L
Label rate1.5 fl oz per gal
Concentrate needed22.5 fl oz
In metric665.5 ml
โœ… Add to tank22.5 fl oz (1.4 pt)
Rate Convert

Label: 44 gal/ac โ€” Convert to L/ha

From rate44 gal/acre
Conversion factorร— 9.354
Result411.6 L/ha
Per 1,000 sq ft1.01 L / 0.27 gal
โœ… Use for calibration411.6 L/ha
Ratio Label

1:100 Ratio โ€” Fill 25-Gal Tank

Tank size25 gal / 94.64 L
Ratio1:100 concentrate
Concentrate (gal)0.25 gal
In fl oz32 fl oz (1 quart)
โœ… In metric946.4 ml (~1 liter)
๐Ÿ“ Accuracy Notes

Practical Accuracy: When Rounding Is Fine and When It Is Not

Sprayer math does not need laboratory precision, but it does need consistent units. The smaller the tank and stronger the concentrate, the more careful you should be with rounding.

Small spot sprayers need the most careful measuring

A 1-gallon or 2-liter sprayer leaves little room for rounding error. If a label rate is 0.25 fl oz per gallon, rounding to โ€œabout half an ounceโ€ doubles the dose. That may not sound like much, but it can be enough to burn turf, discolor ornamentals, or leave residues where you plan to seed later. For low-volume spot work, use milliliters because they are easier to measure accurately at small amounts. For example, 0.25 fl oz is about 7.4 ml.

When a product lists a range, such as 1 to 2 fl oz per gallon, do not automatically choose the higher end. The lower end may be intended for young weeds, sensitive turf, or repeat treatment; the higher end may be for tougher weeds, spot treatment, or non-lawn areas. Read the site and target weed section before choosing.

Large tanks need agitation and partial-fill math

For 15, 25, and 50-gallon tanks, the math is easy but mixing quality becomes more important. A 25-gallon tank at 1.5 fl oz per gallon needs 37.5 fl oz of concentrate, or a little more than 1 quart. Add water first, add concentrate, agitate, then finish filling. If the tank sits for more than a few minutes, agitate again before spraying. Many products settle, separate, or foam if mixed in the wrong order.

Partial fills are common. If a 25-gallon sprayer only needs 12 gallons for the job, calculate concentrate for 12 gallons, not for the full tank. Leftover mixed pesticide can be difficult to store or legally dispose of, so it is better to mix slightly less and refill than to make too much.

๐Ÿงฎ Rounding Guide for Lawn Sprays

AmountBetter UnitReason
Under 1 fl ozmlMore accurate for small herbicide doses
1โ€“8 fl ozfl oz or mlGood for pump and backpack sprayers
8โ€“32 fl ozcups / pints / mlUseful for 4โ€“15 gallon tanks
32+ fl ozquarts or litersBest for ATV and tow-behind tanks
Dry productsgrams or ounces by weightDo not treat dry ounces as fluid ounces

โœ… Quick Check Before Spraying

Confirm product, target weed or pest, tank size, label rate, units, weather, protective gear, and area to be treated. Then spray plain water on a small test area if your nozzle pattern, walking speed, or pressure setting changed since the last use.

โš ๏ธ Keep Separate Sprayers

Many lawn pros keep one sprayer for herbicides and another for fertilizers, biostimulants, or products used near ornamentals. Residue from a broadleaf herbicide can damage flowers, vegetables, shrubs, or new seedlings even after a casual rinse.

โ“ FAQ

Sprayer Volume Conversion โ€” FAQ

Common questions about converting gallons, liters, mixing rates, and application volumes for lawn sprayers.

A 4 US gallon backpack sprayer holds 15.14 liters. This is the most common homeowner backpack sprayer size sold in the US. To fill a 4-gallon tank with a product labeled at 2 fl oz per gallon, you need 8 fl oz of concentrate โ€” equivalent to 236.6 ml. If the product label shows ml per liter instead, multiply the ml/L rate by 15.14 to get the total ml of concentrate for a full 4-gallon tank.
Multiply fl oz per gallon by 7.8125 to get ml per liter. This factor comes from: 29.5735 ml per fl oz รท 3.78541 liters per gallon = 7.8125. Common conversions: 1 fl oz/gal = 7.81 ml/L; 2 fl oz/gal = 15.63 ml/L; 4 fl oz/gal = 31.25 ml/L. To convert the other direction (ml/L to fl oz/gal), divide by 7.8125.
A US gallon equals 3.785 liters while an Imperial gallon (used in the UK, older Canadian products, and some Commonwealth countries) equals 4.546 liters โ€” about 20% larger. If you mix a herbicide at the rate stated for Imperial gallons but use a US gallon container, you'll use 20% less concentrate than the label intends, resulting in under-dosing. Always confirm which gallon standard a label uses. Most US retail products specify US gallons. UK and Australian products specify Imperial gallons or liters.
Multiply gallons per acre by 9.354 to get liters per hectare. One gallon per acre = 9.354 liters per hectare. Example: a herbicide labeled at 44 gal/ac = 44 ร— 9.354 = 411.6 L/ha. For home lawns measured in sq ft: 1 gal/acre รท 43,560 sq ft = 0.0000229 gal/sq ft = 0.0293 fl oz per 100 sq ft per gal/acre label rate. Use the Application Rate tab above for instant conversions.
It depends on the label rate. For a 2-gallon sprayer: if the label says 1 fl oz per gallon, add 2 fl oz total. If the label says 2 fl oz per gallon, add 4 fl oz total. If the label says 1.5 oz per gallon, add 3 fl oz total. In metric: a 2-gallon sprayer holds 7.571 liters. Multiply the ml/L rate by 7.571 to get total ml of concentrate needed. Use the Mix Ratio tab above โ€” select your tank size and enter the label rate to get the exact amount instantly.
There are 128 US fluid ounces in 1 US gallon. Common sprayer measurements: 1/2 gallon = 64 fl oz; 1 quart = 32 fl oz; 1 pint = 16 fl oz; 1 cup = 8 fl oz. For metric: 1 US fluid ounce = 29.5735 milliliters. So 128 fl oz (1 gallon) = 3,785.4 ml = 3.785 liters. Imperial fluid ounces are slightly different (28.413 ml each, with 160 per Imperial gallon) โ€” be aware when using UK product labels.
1 US teaspoon = 4.929 ml (approximately 5 ml). 1 US tablespoon = 14.787 ml (approximately 15 ml). These measurements are commonly referenced on herbicide and pesticide labels for small-volume mixing. 1 teaspoon per gallon = 1.30 ml per liter. 1 tablespoon per gallon = 3.91 ml per liter. For very small concentrate amounts under 1 fl oz, a graduated syringe or measuring spoon is more accurate than trying to estimate in a standard measuring cup.
To calibrate a backpack or pump sprayer: (1) Fill with plain water. (2) Mark a 1,000 sq ft area (e.g. 25 ft ร— 40 ft). (3) Spray the area at your normal walking speed and pressure. (4) Measure how much water was used (subtract remaining from full tank). (5) That volume = your output per 1,000 sq ft. Use this calibration output to calculate how much concentrate to mix for your lawn area. Most backpack sprayers output 0.5 to 1.5 gallons per 1,000 sq ft at normal walking pace.
One US liquid gallon is exactly 231 cubic inches, which is commonly expressed as 3.785411784 liters. For lawn sprayer work, 3.785 L is accurate enough for tank-size conversion, but the calculator uses the longer value internally. Do not confuse this with the Imperial gallon, which is 4.546 liters.
One US fluid ounce is 29.5735 ml and one US gallon is 3.78541 liters. Divide 29.5735 by 3.78541 and you get 7.8125 ml per liter. That is the base factor for converting any liquid concentrate rate from fl oz/gal to ml/L.
No. A stronger-than-label mix can injure turf, increase drift and runoff risk, waste product, and may violate pesticide law. Better control usually comes from correct weed identification, good timing, calibrated coverage, proper weather, and repeating the labeled application interval when allowed by the label.
First convert the label rate to the full tank. If the label says 1 fl oz per gallon, add 4 fl oz. If it says 2 fl oz per gallon, add 8 fl oz. If it says 10 ml per liter, multiply by 15.14 L, which equals about 151 ml. Fill halfway with water, add concentrate, agitate, then top off to 4 gallons.
Using US gallons: 2 gallons = 7.57 liters, 4 gallons = 15.14 liters, and 15 gallons = 56.78 liters. These are common sprayer sizes: 2 gallons for small pump sprayers, 4 gallons for backpack sprayers, and 15 gallons for ATV or tow-behind tanks.
Follow the label unit. Liquid herbicides and liquid fertilizers are usually measured by volume, such as fl oz, ml, or liters. Dry soluble products may be measured by weight, such as ounces by weight, pounds, grams, or kilograms. Do not assume a dry ounce equals a fluid ounce; they measure different things.
Measure the target area first, then estimate how much spray solution your calibrated sprayer uses on that area. Mix only that amount, or slightly less if you can easily refill. Leftover spray mix should usually be applied to a labeled site at a labeled rate rather than stored for weeks, but exact disposal instructions depend on the product label and local rules.
Yes. The volume conversions work for liquid fertilizer, iron, wetting agents, biostimulants, fungicides, insecticides, and herbicides. The only difference is the label. Fertilizer labels may use ounces per gallon, ounces per 1,000 sq ft, or gallons per acre. Pesticide labels may include additional restrictions, so always read the current label before mixing.
Converting only the tank volume is not enough. You also need to convert the product rate so the concentration stays the same. For example, 4 gallons is 15.14 liters, but the concentrate amount must still match the label ratio. A 2 fl oz/gal label rate becomes 15.63 ml/L, so a 15.14-liter tank needs about 237 ml.