đź’§ CCF to Gallons Conversion

Translate hundred cubic feet (CCF) into gallons and other handy volume units for utility tracking.

Water utilities often bill in CCF—hundred cubic feet. Use this converter to understand how many gallons, liters, or cubic meters that equals.

Enter a non-negative CCF amount from your water bill.

Gallons (US)

748.05

1 CCF = 748.052 gallons

Cubic Feet (ftÂł)

100

Liters (L)

2,831.7

Cubic Meters (mÂł)

2.8317

Estimated cost at $2.50 per CCF: $2.50.

Actual rates vary by utility—check your bill for exact pricing and tiered usage brackets.

How to Use This Calculator

1

Locate the CCF value on your bill

Find the usage column that lists your water consumption in CCF.

2

Enter the CCF amount

Type the number of CCF into the calculator. Partial values are supported.

3

Review gallon and metric equivalents

Use the conversion to understand actual gallons used and track conservation goals.

Formula

1 CCF = 100 cubic feet

1 cubic foot = 7.48052 gallons

Gallons = CCF Ă— 748.052

Metric conversions use 1 US gallon = 3.785411784 liters.

Use the formula breakdown to confirm the calculation logic or perform the conversion manually if needed.

Full Description

Water utilities commonly bill in CCF (hundred cubic feet) because it aligns with pipe flow measurements. However, households typically think in gallons. Converting between the two clarifies how much water you actually consume and how conservation efforts translate into everyday activities.

By understanding CCF, you can benchmark shower usage, irrigation schedules, or appliance efficiency. The calculator also provides liters and cubic meters to help international users or engineering teams integrate the data into their reporting systems.

Pair this tool with your utility rate structure to estimate monthly bills, evaluate tier thresholds, and plan for seasonal fluctuations in water consumption.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does CCF stand for?

CCF stands for hundred cubic feet. It represents 748.052 gallons of water and is a standard billing unit for utilities.

Why is my bill in CCF instead of gallons?

Water meters measure volume in cubic feet, making CCF convenient for utilities. Converting to gallons helps customers relate the numbers to everyday usage.

How can I estimate my bill from CCF?

Multiply the CCF usage by your utility’s rate per CCF. Rates often increase in higher usage tiers, so review your bill for tier thresholds.

Does this work for gas utilities too?

Some natural gas utilities also use CCF. While the conversion to gallons differs for gases, the volumetric conversion between CCF and cubic feet remains the same.