Understanding Fuel Efficiency: MPG, km/L, and L/100km Explained

Three Systems, One Concept

Fuel efficiency measures how far a vehicle can travel on a given amount of fuel. Different regions use different units, which makes comparing cars across markets surprisingly tricky:

  • Miles per gallon (MPG) — Used in the US and UK
  • Kilometres per litre (km/L) — Used in India, Japan, and parts of Asia and Latin America
  • Litres per 100 kilometres (L/100km) — Used in Europe, Canada, Australia, and China

The first two measure distance per unit of fuel (higher = better). The third measures fuel per unit of distance (lower = better). This inverse relationship is the biggest source of confusion.

MPG: Miles Per Gallon

Used in the US and UK, but with a critical difference: US and UK gallons are not the same size.

SystemGallon SizeEffect on MPG
US MPG3.785 litresLower number
UK (Imperial) MPG4.546 litresHigher number (~20% more)

This means a car rated at 30 MPG (US) would be rated at about 36 MPG (UK) — same car, same efficiency, different numbers. When comparing MPG ratings across US and UK sources, always check which gallon is being used.

💡 Formula: UK MPG = US MPG × 1.201 (because 1 UK gallon = 1.201 US gallons)

km/L: Kilometres Per Litre

Popular in India, Japan, South Korea, and parts of Latin America. It's arguably the most intuitive unit: "How many kilometres can I drive on one litre of fuel?"

A car getting 15 km/L can travel 15 km on one litre. If your tank holds 45 litres, your range is 15 × 45 = 675 km.

India's ARAI (Automotive Research Association of India) certifies fuel efficiency in km/L. However, real-world figures are typically 15–25% lower than ARAI ratings due to differences in test conditions vs actual driving.

L/100km: The Inverse Unit

Used across Europe, Canada, Australia, and China. Instead of asking "how far can I go on one unit of fuel," it asks "how much fuel do I need to go 100 km?"

This inverse framing confuses many people at first, but it has a mathematical advantage: fuel savings are linear. Going from 10 L/100km to 8 L/100km always saves exactly 2 litres per 100 km, regardless of starting efficiency. With MPG, going from 15 to 17 MPG saves more fuel than going from 35 to 37 MPG — a phenomenon called the "MPG illusion."

The MPG Illusion

Consider upgrading two vehicles, each driving 10,000 miles per year:

  • SUV: 14 MPG → 17 MPG — saves 126 gallons/year
  • Sedan: 35 MPG → 45 MPG — saves 63 gallons/year

The SUV's 3 MPG improvement saves twice as much fuel as the sedan's 10 MPG improvement! In L/100km, this would be obvious: the SUV went from 16.8 to 13.8 (saving 3.0), while the sedan went from 6.7 to 5.2 (saving 1.5). Linear savings, no illusion.

Conversion Formulas

From → ToFormula
km/L → L/100kmL/100km = 100 ÷ km/L
L/100km → km/Lkm/L = 100 ÷ L/100km
km/L → MPG (US)MPG = km/L × 2.35215
MPG (US) → km/Lkm/L = MPG ÷ 2.35215
MPG (US) → L/100kmL/100km = 235.215 ÷ MPG
L/100km → MPG (US)MPG = 235.215 ÷ L/100km
MPG (US) → MPG (UK)MPG (UK) = MPG (US) × 1.20095

Fuel Efficiency Benchmarks

Vehicle Typekm/LMPG (US)L/100km
Large SUV / truck6–914–2111–17
Mid-size sedan12–1628–386–8
Compact car16–2238–524.5–6
Hybrid20–3047–703.3–5
Diesel sedan18–2542–594–5.5
Motorcycle25–5059–1182–4

Electric Vehicles: Different Metrics

Electric vehicles don't use fuel in the traditional sense, so they have their own efficiency metrics:

  • kWh/100km — Used in Europe. A typical EV uses 15–20 kWh/100km. Lower = better.
  • MPGe (miles per gallon equivalent) — US EPA rating. Based on the energy content of one gallon of gasoline (33.7 kWh). A Tesla Model 3 rates ~130 MPGe.
  • Wh/mi or Wh/km — Watts per mile/km. Used by EV enthusiasts for real-world tracking.
  • km/kWh — Direct analogue to km/L. A typical EV gets 5–7 km/kWh.

10 Tips to Improve Fuel Efficiency

  1. Maintain steady speed. Use cruise control on highways. Constant acceleration and braking wastes fuel.
  2. Check tyre pressure monthly. Under-inflated tyres increase rolling resistance. Proper inflation improves efficiency by 2–3%.
  3. Remove excess weight. Every extra 45 kg (~100 lb) reduces efficiency by about 1%.
  4. Don't idle. Turn off the engine if you'll be stopped for more than 60 seconds. Modern engines use less fuel restarting than idling.
  5. Use the recommended fuel grade. Premium fuel in a regular-grade engine wastes money without improving efficiency.
  6. Drive in the highest gear possible. Lower RPMs generally mean lower fuel consumption.
  7. Reduce aerodynamic drag. Remove roof racks when not in use. Close windows at highway speeds.
  8. Keep up with maintenance. Clean air filters, fresh spark plugs, and proper oil all contribute to efficiency.
  9. Plan routes. Shorter distances and fewer stops mean less fuel wasted in traffic and acceleration.
  10. Accelerate gently. Aggressive acceleration can increase fuel consumption by 15–30%. Pretend there's an egg under the pedal.

Convert fuel efficiency units instantly:

⛽ Fuel Efficiency Converter 🏎️ Speed Converter