Volume measures the three-dimensional space inside a solid object. Unlike surface area (which covers the outside), volume tells you how much a shape can hold — useful for tanks, containers, packaging, and construction estimates.

What Is Volume?

Volume is the amount of space enclosed within a 3D shape. It is measured in cubic units such as m³, cm³, ft³, or in litres (L) and millilitres (mL). One litre equals 1,000 cm³.

Key idea: Length × Length × Length = cubic units. Volume always uses three dimensions multiplied together.

Cylinder Volume

V = πr²h

Where r = radius of circular base, h = height (or length) of the cylinder.

The cylinder is one of the most common volume calculations. Think of cans, pipes, drums, and silos. The base area (πr²) is multiplied by the height.

Example: A cylinder with r = 3 cm and h = 10 cm → V = π × 9 × 10 = 282.74 cm³.

Sphere Volume

V = (4/3)πr³

Where r = radius of the sphere.

The sphere formula is derived from integral calculus. The key insight: volume grows with the cube of the radius, so doubling r gives 8× the volume.

Example: A sphere with r = 5 cm → V = (4/3) × π × 125 = 523.60 cm³.

Cone Volume

V = (1/3)πr²h

Where r = base radius, h = perpendicular height.

A cone is exactly one-third the volume of a cylinder with the same base and height. This relationship is fundamental in geometry.

Example: A cone with r = 4 cm and h = 9 cm → V = (1/3) × π × 16 × 9 = 150.80 cm³.

Cube Volume

V = a³

Where a = side length of the cube.

The simplest volume formula. All edges are equal, so you multiply the side length by itself three times.

Example: A cube with a = 6 cm → V = 216 cm³.

Rectangular Prism (Cuboid) Volume

V = l × w × h

Where l = length, w = width, h = height.

Boxes, rooms, shipping containers, and bricks are all rectangular prisms. Multiply the three perpendicular dimensions.

Example: A box 5 m × 3 m × 2 m → V = 30 m³.

Pyramid Volume

V = (1/3)Bh

Where B = area of the base, h = perpendicular height from base to apex.

For a square-based pyramid with side a: B = a². For a triangular base with side a: B = (√3/4)a². Any pyramid is one-third the volume of a prism with the same base and height.

Example: Square base a = 4 cm, h = 9 cm → V = (1/3) × 16 × 9 = 48 cm³.

Triangular Prism Volume

V = (1/2) × b × hₜ × L

Where b = triangle base, hₜ = triangle height, L = prism length.

Calculate the triangle cross-section area first ((1/2)b × hₜ), then multiply by the length of the prism.

Example: b = 6 cm, hₜ = 4 cm, L = 10 cm → V = (1/2) × 6 × 4 × 10 = 120 cm³.

Common Volume Mistakes

Volume Unit Conversions

UnitEquivalent
1 m³1,000 L = 1,000,000 cm³
1 L1,000 mL = 1,000 cm³
1 ft³28.317 L = 7.481 US gal
1 US gal3.785 L = 231 in³

Use the Cylinder Volume Calculator, Sphere Volume Calculator, or any of the volume calculators for instant results with unit conversion.