Volume formulas let you calculate how much space a 3D shape occupies. This quick-reference chart covers every common solid with the formula, variable definitions, and a worked example for each.

Complete Volume Formulas Table

ShapeFormulaVariables
CylinderV = πr²hr = radius, h = height
SphereV = (4/3)πr³r = radius
ConeV = (1/3)πr²hr = base radius, h = height
CubeV = a³a = side length
Rectangular PrismV = l × w × hl = length, w = width, h = height
Pyramid (square)V = (1/3)a²ha = base side, h = height
Triangular PrismV = (1/2)bh_t × Lb = base, h_t = triangle height, L = length

Cylinder Volume: V = πr²h

V = πr²h

What it means: The circular base area (πr²) extended through the height h.
Example: r = 5 cm, h = 12 cm → V = π × 25 × 12 = 942.48 cm³

Cylinders appear as cans, pipes, drums, silos, columns, and water tanks. The formula works for any right circular cylinder.

Sphere Volume: V = (4/3)πr³

V = (4/3)πr³

What it means: The volume enclosed by a perfectly round surface at distance r from center.
Example: r = 6 cm → V = (4/3) × π × 216 = 904.78 cm³

Balls, globes, bubbles, and planets are spheres. Volume grows with the cube of radius, so small changes in r produce large volume changes.

Cone Volume: V = (1/3)πr²h

V = (1/3)πr²h

What it means: Exactly one-third of the cylinder that shares the same base and height.
Example: r = 3 cm, h = 7 cm → V = (1/3) × π × 9 × 7 = 65.97 cm³

Ice cream cones, funnels, traffic cones, and volcanic shapes use this formula. Always use perpendicular height, not slant height.

Cube Volume: V = a³

V = a³

What it means: Side × side × side. All edges are equal.
Example: a = 4 cm → V = 64 cm³

Dice, sugar cubes, and Rubik's cubes are common examples. A cube is a special rectangular prism where l = w = h.

Rectangular Prism Volume: V = lwh

V = l × w × h

What it means: Three perpendicular dimensions multiplied together.
Example: 8 × 4 × 3 = 96 cm³

Most real-world boxes, rooms, pools, and containers are rectangular prisms. This is the most frequently used volume formula in practical applications.

Pyramid Volume: V = (1/3)Bh

V = (1/3)Bh

What it means: One-third the volume of a prism with the same base and height.
Square base: B = a²
Triangular base: B = (√3/4)a²
Example (square): a = 5, h = 12 → V = (1/3) × 25 × 12 = 100 cm³

The 1/3 factor applies to all pyramids regardless of base shape. Egyptian pyramids, roof peaks, and crystal formations follow this formula.

Triangular Prism Volume: V = (1/2)bh_t × L

V = (1/2) × b × hₜ × L

What it means: Triangle cross-section area × prism length.
Example: b = 5, hₜ = 4, L = 8 → V = (1/2) × 5 × 4 × 8 = 80 cm³

Toblerone boxes, roof sections, and wedge-shaped objects are triangular prisms. First find the triangle area, then multiply by length.

Key Relationships Between Volume Formulas

Volume vs Surface Area

PropertyVolumeSurface Area
MeasuresSpace insideOutside covering
UnitsCubic (m³, cm³, L)Square (m², cm²)
Scales asLength³Length²
Used forCapacity, fillingPainting, wrapping

Use the volume calculators: Cylinder, Sphere, Cone, Cube, Rectangular Prism, Pyramid, Triangular Prism.