Convert Imperial Pint to Hectoliter
Convert imperial pints to hectoliters instantly. 1 imperial pint = 0.0056826125 hectoliter — use the live calculator, the exact formula, a conversion table and worked examples. Also check the Hectoliter to Imperial Pint converter for the reverse conversion.
Units explained
Imperial Pint
An imperial pint is one eighth of an imperial gallon (568.261 mL).
A subdivision of the 1824 imperial gallon; larger than the US pint.
Iconic as the British pint of beer and milk.
UK, 1824.
Hectoliter
A hectoliter is 100 liters (0.1 m³).
Formed with the SI prefix hecto- applied to the liter.
Standard in brewing, winemaking and agricultural trade across Europe.
Metric prefix system.
Imperial Pint to Hectoliter conversion formula
The relationship between imperial pints and hectoliters:
To convert imperial pints to hectoliters, multiply the value in imperial pints by 0.0056826125. To reverse, multiply hectoliters by 175.9753986393.
How to use this converter
Type a value into the calculator. The result in hectoliters updates as you type. Tap a quick value, copy the result with one click, or use the swap arrow to jump straight to the Hectoliter to Imperial Pint converter for the reverse direction.
Step-by-step: convert imperial pints to hectoliters
- Write down the value in imperial pints (pt).
- Multiply that value by the factor 0.0056826125.
- The product is the equivalent value in hectoliters (hL).
- To reverse, multiply the hectoliter value by 175.9753986393.
Worked examples
Example 1 — Convert 1 pt to hL:
1 × 0.0056826125 = 0.0056826125 hL
Example 2 — Convert 100 pt to hL:
100 × 0.0056826125 = 0.56826125 hL
Real-world example — Quarter-meter measurement reference
A 250,000-imperial pint length equals 0.25 hectoliters — useful for comparing supply-chain spec sheets where some lengths are quoted in the smaller unit and some in the larger.
250000 pt × 0.0056826125 = 1420.653125 hL
Real-world example — From microscopic to macroscopic
A million imperial pints equals exactly one hectoliter. This kind of conversion appears in microfluidics, where total channel length is given in hectoliters but feature widths are in imperial pints.
1000000 pt × 0.0056826125 = 5682.6125 hL
Real-world example — Macro-scale buildup
A million imperial pints equals exactly one hectoliter — the conversion that bridges microscale features and macroscale objects in microfluidic, biomedical, and semiconductor packaging design.
1000000 pt × 0.0056826125 = 5682.6125 hL
Imperial Pint to Hectoliter conversion table
Standard reference values for converting imperial pints to hectoliters:
| Imperial Pint [pt] | Hectoliter [hL] |
|---|---|
| 0.01 | 5.682612e-5 |
| 0.1 | 0.0005682613 |
| 1 | 0.0056826125 |
| 2 | 0.011365225 |
| 3 | 0.0170478375 |
| 4 | 0.02273045 |
| 5 | 0.0284130625 |
| 10 | 0.056826125 |
| 20 | 0.11365225 |
| 30 | 0.170478375 |
| 40 | 0.2273045 |
| 50 | 0.284130625 |
| 100 | 0.56826125 |
| 500 | 2.84130625 |
| 1000 | 5.6826125 |
Frequently asked questions
How many hectoliters is 1 imperial pint?
How do I convert imperial pints to hectoliters?
How do I convert hectoliters back to imperial pints?
How many hectoliters is 100 imperial pints?
Popular volume unit conversions
Convert Imperial Pint to other volume units
Show all Imperial Pint conversions
Metric / SI (8 units)
US Customary (Liquid) (8 units)
Imperial (UK) (3 units)
Cubic (length-derived) (3 units)
Cooking / Culinary (3 units)
Sources & references
Conversion factor (1 pt = 0.0056826125 hL) 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 Hydrographic Organization — Resolution on the Nautical Mile
International authority that standardised the nautical mile at exactly 1852 m in 1929 — the value adopted worldwide for sea and air navigation.