Gasoline Weight Calculator

Calculate the weight of gasoline from volume for automotive, logistics, and fuel transport applications.

Fuel Calculator:

Convert gasoline volume to weight using density for accurate load calculations in vehicles, fuel transport, and logistics planning.

Fuel Weight Converter

Conversion Direction

Amount of gasoline to convert to weight

Select fuel type or enter custom density

kg/L

Gasoline density (typically 0.72-0.78 kg/L)

Fuel Weight Results

Enter volume and select fuel type, then click "Calculate"

to determine gasoline weight

Gasoline Weight Calculation

When planning vehicle loads, fuel transport, or logistics operations, knowing the weight of gasoline is often more important than its volume. While fuel is typically measured in liters or gallons at the pump, many safety regulations, vehicle specifications, and transportation calculations require weight measurements. This calculator converts gasoline volume to weight using density for accurate calculations.

Gasoline density varies depending on the fuel type, temperature, and additives. Regular gasoline typically weighs around 0.74 kg per liter, but premium grades and ethanol blends have slightly different densities. Understanding these weight relationships is crucial for fleet management, fuel logistics, and compliance with load regulations.

Gasoline Weight Formula

The calculator uses the fundamental relationship between volume and weight:

Weight Calculation:
Weight = Volume × Density
*Density typically 0.72-0.78 kg/L for gasoline at standard temperature
Reverse Calculation:
Volume = Weight ÷ Density
*Converts fuel weight back to volume

Fuel Weight Examples

Here are common gasoline weight calculations for different fuel volumes:

Volume Unit Density (kg/L) Weight
10 Liters 0.74 7.4 kg
5 US Gallons 0.74 14.0 kg
50 Liters 0.75 37.5 kg
Logistics Tip:

When planning fuel shipments or vehicle loads, always calculate fuel weight using the actual density of your specific fuel type. Ethanol blends have lower density than pure gasoline, which affects total load calculations.