Convert Deciliter to US Cup
Convert deciliters to us cups instantly. 1 deciliter = 0.4226752838 us cup — use the live calculator, the exact formula, a conversion table and worked examples. Also check the US Cup to Deciliter converter for the reverse conversion.
Units explained
Deciliter
A deciliter is one tenth of a liter (0.0001 m³).
Formed with the SI prefix deci- applied to the liter.
Common in European cooking and clinical measurements.
Metric prefix system.
US Cup
A US customary cup is one sixteenth of a US gallon (236.588 mL).
Standardized for American cooking; distinct from the 240 mL US legal cup and the 250 mL metric cup.
The standard US cooking-volume unit in recipes.
US customary cooking measure.
Deciliter to US Cup conversion formula
The relationship between deciliters and us cups:
To convert deciliters to us cups, multiply the value in deciliters by 0.4226752838. To reverse, multiply us cups by 2.365882365.
How to use this converter
Type a value into the calculator. The result in us cups updates as you type. Tap a quick value, copy the result with one click, or use the swap arrow to jump straight to the US Cup to Deciliter converter for the reverse direction.
Step-by-step: convert deciliters to us cups
- Write down the value in deciliters (dL).
- Multiply that value by the factor 0.4226752838.
- The product is the equivalent value in us cups (cup).
- To reverse, multiply the us cup value by 2.365882365.
Worked examples
Example 1 — Convert 1 dL to cup:
1 × 0.4226752838 = 0.4226752838 cup
Example 2 — Convert 100 dL to cup:
100 × 0.4226752838 = 42.2675283773 cup
Real-world example — Hair-width scale measurements
A 70-deciliter measurement (about the diameter of a human hair) is the kind of value materials engineers regularly express in adjacent micro-scale units like us cups for direct comparison across supplier datasheets.
70 dL × 0.4226752838 = 29.5872698641 cup
Real-world example — Paper and film thicknesses
At the thickness of office paper (roughly 3 deciliters), converting between sub-millimeter units is routine for packaging and printing buyers comparing quotes from metric and US suppliers.
3 dL × 0.4226752838 = 1.2680258513 cup
Real-world example — Plastic-film thickness alternates
A 150-deciliter plastic film converts cleanly to us cups — useful for packaging buyers reconciling supplier datasheets across metric and US measurement systems.
150 dL × 0.4226752838 = 63.401292566 cup
Deciliter to US Cup conversion table
Standard reference values for converting deciliters to us cups:
| Deciliter [dL] | US Cup [cup] |
|---|---|
| 0.01 | 0.0042267528 |
| 0.1 | 0.0422675284 |
| 1 | 0.4226752838 |
| 2 | 0.8453505675 |
| 3 | 1.2680258513 |
| 4 | 1.6907011351 |
| 5 | 2.1133764189 |
| 10 | 4.2267528377 |
| 20 | 8.4535056755 |
| 30 | 12.6802585132 |
| 40 | 16.9070113509 |
| 50 | 21.1337641887 |
| 100 | 42.2675283773 |
| 500 | 211.3376418865 |
| 1000 | 422.675283773 |
Frequently asked questions
How many us cups is 1 deciliter?
How do I convert deciliters to us cups?
How do I convert us cups back to deciliters?
How many us cups is 100 deciliters?
Popular volume unit conversions
Convert Deciliter to other volume units
Show all Deciliter conversions
Metric / SI (7 units)
US Customary (Liquid) (8 units)
Imperial (UK) (4 units)
Cubic (length-derived) (3 units)
Cooking / Culinary (3 units)
Sources & references
Conversion factor (1 dL = 0.4226752838 cup) verified against the following authoritative sources:
- BIPM — The International System of Units (SI Brochure 9th ed.)
Official BIPM publication defining the seven SI base units (including the meter) and the rules for their use. The global authority on units of measurement.
- NIST — Guide to the SI
US National Institute of Standards and Technology reference covering the SI base and derived units with definitions and usage rules for US technical practice.
- NIST Special Publication 811 — Guide for the Use of the International System of Units
Detailed NIST guide covering exact conversion factors between SI and US customary units along with formatting and rounding conventions.
- NIST — Refinement of values for the yard and pound (Federal Register 1959)
The treaty (signed by US
- International Astronomical Union — System of Astronomical Constants
The IAU defines astronomical units including the AU (149597870700 m exactly) light-year and parsec used in astronomy and astrophysics.