Cubic Meters to Cubic Feet

1 Cubic Meter equals 35.314667 Cubic Feet using exact modern volume definitions anchored to liters or cubic meters.

Direct Answer

1 Cubic Meter equals 35.314667 Cubic Feet

This conversion uses exact modern volume definitions anchored to liters or cubic meters.

For 0.1 Cubic Meters, the result equals 3.531467 Cubic Feet.

Converter Calculator

35.314667 Cubic Feet

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Explanation

Use this page when you want a direct Cubic Meters to Cubic Feet conversion. On this page, 1 Cubic Meter equals 35.314667 Cubic Feet.

This route uses exact modern volume definitions, so the direct answer, calculator, table, and FAQ stay aligned for Cubic Meters to Cubic Feet.

Cubic meters (m³): the SI structural volume unit used for larger capacities, bulk storage, and engineering calculations.

Cubic feet (ft³): an imperial and US structural volume unit used for bulk volume, airflow, storage, and building-related capacity reporting.

This route is useful when comparing structural and bulk volumes between cubic meters, cubic feet, and related liquid-capacity references in storage, airflow, and engineering work.

This conversion is purely multiplicative because both units reduce through liters or cubic meters using fixed volume definitions with no offset.

Method & Reference

  • Method basis: exact conversion formula shown in Direct Answer.
  • Applied factor: 1 Cubic Meter = 35.314667 Cubic Feet (using exact modern volume definitions anchored to liters or cubic meters).
  • Consistency rule: calculator output and table values use the same constants and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

Cubic MetersCubic Feet
0.1 3.531467
0.25 8.828667
0.5 17.657333
1 35.314667
2 70.629333
5 176.573334
10 353.146667
25 882.866668
50 1,765.733336
100 3,531.466672

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 cubic meter in cubic feet?

1 Cubic Meter equals 35.314667 Cubic Feet on this page.

What definition does this Cubic Meters to Cubic Feet page use?

This route uses exact metric and US customary volume definitions, so the factor stays consistent across the direct answer, calculator, table, and FAQ.

Is there a reverse Cubic Feet to Cubic Meters page?

Use the mirror Cubic Feet to Cubic Meters page to switch the direction while keeping the same fixed volume definitions.