Cubic Feet, Made Simple: Measuring Volume for Moving, Shipping and Storage
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Cubic feet is one of those measurements you rarely think about until you are standing in front of a stack of boxes wondering whether they will fit in the truck. A cubic foot is simply the volume of a cube that measures one foot on every side. Multiply that out and a single cubic foot equals 1,728 cubic inches, or about 28.3 litres. Once that picture is in your head, every cubic-feet calculation is just a question of how many of those one-foot cubes would fill the space you are measuring.
The arithmetic never changes: length times width times height. What trips people up is units. A tape measure usually reports inches, furniture catalogues often use inches too, and European appliances list centimetres, yet the answer you want is in feet. The clean approach is to convert each side to feet first, then multiply. The shortcut for inches is to multiply the three raw numbers and divide by 1,728. For centimetres, work in cubic centimetres and divide by 28,316.8. The calculator does whichever conversion you need so you never have to remember the factor.
Movers lean on cubic feet because rental trucks and shipping containers are rated that way. Add up the volume of your boxes and large items, compare it to the truck's rated capacity, and you avoid both the trip back for a second load and paying for half-empty space. A rough rule is that a fully packed standard moving box is around 3 to 4.5 ft³, so even a quick tally of box sizes gets you a usable estimate before you book anything.
In shipping and freight the number does double duty. Beyond fitting items into a container, carriers convert volume into a dimensional or volumetric weight and bill whichever is greater, the real weight or the volumetric one. Lightweight but bulky parcels — pillows, lampshades, packing foam — are priced on their cubic feet, not their pounds. Calculating volume first lets you see that coming and sometimes repack into a smaller box to drop a price tier.
Around the house and yard the same tool keeps showing up. Refrigerator and freezer capacity is quoted in cubic feet, so measuring the interior tells you whether a model truly holds more than your current one. Garden soil, mulch and gravel are sold by the cubic foot or cubic yard, and since one cubic yard is exactly 27 cubic feet, a quick volume figure converts straight into how many bags to buy. The skill transfers everywhere because volume is volume, whatever you are filling.
Quick tips
- Decide up front whether you need interior or exterior dimensions — inside space for what fits, outside space for shipping or footprint.
- When measuring in inches, you can multiply all three sides and divide by 1,728 in one step rather than converting each side separately.
- For an irregular item, break it into simple boxes and cylinders, calculate each piece, and add the volumes together.
- Remember 1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet when ordering soil, mulch or gravel so you can switch between the units suppliers use.
The Cubic Feet Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.