How to Convert Gas M3 to kWh: Step-by-Step

Converting gas cubic metres to kilowatt hours isn't complicated once you know the formula. Every UK energy supplier — from British Gas to Octopus Energy — uses the same method mandated by Ofgem. Here's exactly how it works:

1

Read Your Gas Meter

Note your current reading in cubic metres. Metric meters (most installed post-1990) show a number followed by or a superscript ³. Dial meters: read left to right, noting the lower number when the hand falls between two digits. Ignore red dials and digits after the decimal point. If you have an imperial meter (showing ft³ or CF), use our gas units to kWh calculator instead — it converts automatically.

2

Find Your Previous Reading

Locate your previous reading from your last gas bill or a note you took earlier. Subtract it from your current reading to get the volume of gas consumed in the period. Example: current 1,250 m³ − previous 1,230 m³ = 20 m³ used. If this is your first reading, your supplier will estimate based on previous occupant usage.

3

Find Your Calorific Value

The calorific value (CV) tells you how much energy is packed into each cubic metre of gas. Find it on your gas bill in the usage breakdown section — look for "CV", "calorific value" or "energy content". It may be shown in MJ/m³ — divide by 3.6 to convert to kWh/m³. If you can't find it, use the UK average of 39.5 kWh/m³. See the regional CV table below for typical values by area.

4

Apply the Ofgem Formula

Multiply the volume used by the calorific value, then multiply by 1.02264 (the volume correction factor — see below), then divide by 3.6. The division by 3.6 converts megajoules to kilowatt hours. Formula: kWh = m³ × CV × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6. Our calculator does all this instantly — just enter your readings above.

5

Verify Against Your Bill

Compare your calculated kWh with the figure on your gas bill. They should match closely. Minor differences come from rounding of the CV or billing period overlaps. Once you have the kWh figure, use our gas bill calculator to multiply by your unit rate (pence per kWh) and add standing charges to estimate the total cost in pounds.

The Official UK Gas M3 to kWh Formula

The formula below is the exact method set out by Ofgem in their energy billing guidelines and used universally across the UK gas industry:

🇬🇧 Ofgem Official Gas Conversion Formula
kWh = m³ used × Calorific Value × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6
m³ used Current − previous reading
Calorific Value Energy in gas · UK avg 39.5 kWh/m³
1.02264 Volume Correction Factor (Ofgem)
÷ 3.6 Converts MJ to kWh

Why is there a Volume Correction Factor?

Gas meters measure volume under the actual conditions at the meter — which vary with temperature and pressure. The volume correction factor (VCF) of 1.02264 adjusts the measured volume to what it would be at standard reference conditions (15°C and 1.01325 bar). This ensures consistent billing regardless of the ambient conditions at your meter. Ofgem sets this value as a national standard, so all suppliers use exactly 1.02264.

Why Do We Divide by 3.6?

The calorific value of gas is measured in megajoules per cubic metre (MJ/m³) in physics, but energy billing in the UK uses kilowatt hours. Since 1 kWh = 3.6 MJ, dividing by 3.6 converts the result from megajoules into the familiar kWh unit shown on your bill.

Worked Examples

Here are three real-world examples showing the formula in action across different usage levels:

Example 1 — Low Usage
Used: 20 m³ · CV: 39.5
224.15 kWh
(20 × 39.5 × 1.02264) ÷ 3.6
= 807.28 ÷ 3.6 = 224.24 kWh
Example 2 — Medium Usage
Used: 100 m³ · CV: 40.2
1,143.6 kWh
(100 × 40.2 × 1.02264) ÷ 3.6
= 4,111.0 ÷ 3.6 = 1,141.9 kWh
Example 3 — British Gas Bill
Used: 256 m³ · CV: 39.2
2,853 kWh
(256 × 39.2 × 1.02264) ÷ 3.6
= 10,271 ÷ 3.6 = 2,853.1 kWh

UK Regional Calorific Values

Your calorific value changes by region and season. The table below shows typical CV ranges across the UK. For the most accurate conversion, always use the exact CV printed on your gas bill — but this table helps you understand whether your bill's CV is normal for your area.

Region Typical CV Range (kWh/m³) CV Band 1 m³ in kWh (approx)
🇬🇧 UK National Average 38.5 – 40.5 Average 10.95 – 11.51 kWh
London & South East 39.0 – 41.5 Above Avg 11.09 – 11.79 kWh
South West England 38.8 – 41.0 Average 11.03 – 11.65 kWh
East Anglia & East Midlands 39.0 – 40.8 Average 11.09 – 11.59 kWh
West Midlands 38.5 – 40.5 Average 10.95 – 11.51 kWh
Yorkshire & Humber 38.0 – 40.2 Average 10.80 – 11.42 kWh
North West England 37.8 – 40.0 Below Avg 10.74 – 11.37 kWh
North East England 37.5 – 39.8 Below Avg 10.66 – 11.31 kWh
Scotland (Central) 37.5 – 40.0 Below Avg 10.66 – 11.37 kWh
Scotland (North) 37.2 – 39.5 Below Avg 10.58 – 11.23 kWh
Wales 38.0 – 40.2 Average 10.80 – 11.42 kWh
Northern Ireland 38.0 – 40.0 Average 10.80 – 11.37 kWh

Source: National Grid Gas Transmission · Values are approximate and change seasonally · Always use the CV from your gas bill for precise calculations

M3 to kWh Quick Reference Table

Bookmark this table for quick conversions. Based on UK standard calorific value of 39.5 kWh/m³ and VCF of 1.02264. For different CVs, use the calculator above or see our full M3 to kWh conversion guide.

Gas Used (m³) Energy (kWh) Bill Cost (7.42p/kWh) Typical Usage Period
1 m³11.18 kWh£0.83~2 hrs central heating
2 m³22.37 kWh£1.66
5 m³55.92 kWh£4.15~1 day winter usage
10 m³111.84 kWh£8.30~2 days winter usage
20 m³223.68 kWh£16.60~1 week winter heating
30 m³335.52 kWh£24.89
50 m³559.20 kWh£41.49~Monthly summer usage
86 m³961.83 kWh£71.37UK avg monthly usage
100 m³1,118.39 kWh£82.98~Monthly winter usage
150 m³1,677.59 kWh£124.48
200 m³2,236.79 kWh£165.97~2 months winter
300 m³3,355.18 kWh£248.95
500 m³5,591.97 kWh£414.92~6 months usage
1,030 m³11,519 kWh£854.71UK avg annual usage

Based on CV 39.5, VCF 1.02264, unit rate 7.42p/kWh (Ofgem Q1 2025 price cap). Actual bill also includes standing charge (~29p/day) and 5% VAT. Use the gas bill calculator for a full breakdown.

Gas M3 to kWh: A Complete UK Guide

Why Does Your Gas Meter Read M3 but Your Bill Show kWh?

This question confuses almost every UK household seeing it for the first time. Your gas meter physically measures the volume of gas flowing through it — in cubic metres for modern metric meters or cubic feet for older imperial ones. But energy companies can't sell you volume, because the same cubic metre of gas contains different amounts of heat depending on its source, composition, temperature, and pressure.

Instead, gas is bought and sold by its energy content — kilowatt hours. The calorific value is the bridge between volume and energy: it tells you how many kWh of heat you get from burning one cubic metre of your local gas supply. Ofgem requires all UK suppliers to use the same conversion method so that no supplier can shortchange customers by using a different formula. Our complete M3 to kWh conversion guide goes deeper into this if you want the full picture.

Does British Gas Use the Same Formula?

Yes — every regulated gas supplier in Great Britain uses exactly the same Ofgem formula. British Gas, Octopus Energy, EDF, Scottish Power, E.ON, Shell Energy, Bulb (now Octopus) — they all calculate your kWh the same way: m³ × CV × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6. The only variable that differs between suppliers (and between billing periods for the same supplier) is the calorific value, which reflects the actual energy content of gas delivered in your area during that period. Your bill must, by law, state the CV used.

How to Check if Your Gas Meter is Metric or Imperial

Most gas meters installed in the UK since around 1990 are metric — they measure in cubic metres and usually have "m³" or "metric" printed on them. Imperial meters (measuring in cubic feet) are still found in some older properties and show "ft³", "CF" or "cubic feet" on the display or casing. If you're unsure, look at the numbers: metric readings tend to be in the hundreds or low thousands (e.g. 1,250 m³), while imperial readings run much higher (e.g. 48,000 ft³). For imperial meters, use our cubic feet to kWh calculator — it applies an additional conversion (1 ft³ = 0.0283168 m³) before the standard Ofgem formula.

How to Get the Most Accurate Reading

For maximum accuracy: (1) take your meter reading yourself rather than relying on supplier estimates, (2) use the exact calorific value printed on your latest gas bill — not the 39.5 average, (3) check whether your bill uses MJ/m³ or kWh/m³ for the CV, and convert if needed (divide MJ/m³ by 3.6 to get kWh/m³). If your calculated kWh still doesn't match your bill exactly, check whether your supplier used a different CV for part of the billing period — this happens when CV values are updated mid-quarter.

Related Conversions and Tools

Once you have your kWh figure, you might also need to: calculate your gas bill in pounds, check your monthly and annual gas consumption, convert between therms and kWh (useful if comparing UK with US energy costs), or convert MMBTU to m³ for commercial or industrial applications. All tools are free and use the same verified formula standards.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert gas m3 to kWh?
Use the Ofgem formula: kWh = m³ used × Calorific Value × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6. Step 1: subtract previous from current reading to get m³ used. Step 2: find your calorific value on your gas bill (UK average is 39.5 kWh/m³). Step 3: apply the formula. Or simply enter your readings in the calculator at the top of this page for an instant result.
How many kWh is 1 m3 of gas?
Using the UK standard calorific value of 39.5 kWh/m³ and Ofgem's VCF of 1.02264: 1 m³ = (1 × 39.5 × 1.02264) ÷ 3.6 = 11.18 kWh. This figure varies slightly by region and season — Northern regions tend to be slightly lower (10.8–11.0 kWh/m³) and Southern regions slightly higher (11.1–11.6 kWh/m³).
What is the calorific value of gas in the UK?
The UK calorific value (CV) typically ranges from 37.5 to 43.0 kWh/m³, with a national average of 39.5 kWh/m³. It varies by region (see the table above), season (higher in winter when denser gas is used), and gas source. Your exact CV is printed on every gas bill — usually expressed in MJ/m³. Divide by 3.6 to convert to kWh/m³ if needed.
What is the volume correction factor for gas?
The UK standard volume correction factor (VCF) is 1.02264, set by Ofgem. It adjusts the gas volume measured by your meter (which varies with local temperature and atmospheric pressure) to a standardised reference condition of 15°C and 1.01325 bar. This ensures fair billing regardless of local conditions. All UK suppliers use this same value.
How accurate is this gas m3 to kWh calculator?
This calculator is as accurate as the inputs you provide. It uses the exact same Ofgem-mandated formula used by all UK energy suppliers. Results will match your bill exactly if you: (1) use your actual meter readings rather than estimates, (2) use the CV from your bill rather than the 39.5 default, and (3) account for the exact same billing period your supplier used. The calculator itself introduces no rounding error — it calculates to full precision.
Why is my gas bill in kWh when my meter reads m3?
UK energy regulations require suppliers to charge customers by energy delivered (kWh), not by volume (m³). This is fairer because the energy content of gas varies — 1 m³ of winter gas from Norway contains slightly more energy than 1 m³ of summer gas. By converting to kWh, your bill reflects the actual heat energy you used, regardless of gas composition. The M3 to kWh conversion guide explains this in more detail.
Can I use this calculator for British Gas m3 to kWh?
Yes. British Gas uses the same Ofgem formula as all regulated UK suppliers. For the most accurate result, enter your readings and use the calorific value shown on your British Gas bill (typically between 39.2 and 40.8 kWh/m³ depending on your region and the time of year). The default CV of 39.5 will give a very close approximation if you don't have your bill to hand.
How do I find the calorific value on my gas bill?
Look in the usage or consumption breakdown section of your gas bill. It may be labelled "CV", "calorific value", "energy content per m³", or similar. Some suppliers show it in MJ/m³ (megajoules) rather than kWh/m³ — if so, divide by 3.6 to convert. British Gas typically shows it as kWh/m³. Octopus Energy shows it in the detailed usage section of your online account. If you genuinely can't find it, 39.5 kWh/m³ is a safe UK average to use.