Fluid Ounces to Milliliters

1 Fluid Ounce equals 29.57353 Milliliters using exact modern volume definitions anchored to liters or cubic meters.

Direct Answer

1 Fluid Ounce equals 29.57353 Milliliters

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

For 0.1 Fluid Ounces, the result equals 2.957353 Milliliters.

Converter Calculator

29.57353 Milliliters

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Explanation

Use this page when you want a direct Fluid Ounces to Milliliters conversion. On this page, 1 Fluid Ounce equals 29.57353 Milliliters.

This route uses exact modern volume definitions, so the direct answer, calculator, table, and FAQ stay aligned for Fluid Ounces to Milliliters.

Fluid ounces (fl oz): a US customary liquid-volume unit used for beverages, recipes, and packaged-liquid labeling.

Milliliters (mL): a metric volume unit equal to one thousandth of a liter, common for dosing, cooking, and laboratory measurements.

This route is useful when translating volume values across metric and US customary conventions so recipes, packaging, storage, and engineering references stay comparable.

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 Fluid Ounce = 29.57353 Milliliters (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

Fluid OuncesMilliliters
0.1 2.957353
0.25 7.393382
0.5 14.786765
1 29.57353
2 59.147059
5 147.867648
10 295.735296
25 739.338239
50 1,478.676478
100 2,957.352956

Frequently Asked Questions

What is 1 fluid ounce in milliliters?

1 Fluid Ounce equals 29.57353 Milliliters on this page.

What definition does this Fluid Ounces to Milliliters 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 Milliliters to Fluid Ounces page?

Use the mirror Milliliters to Fluid Ounces page to switch the direction while keeping the same fixed volume definitions.