📋 What This Guide Covers

  • What "gas units" actually means and why the conversion is needed
  • How to identify whether you have a metric or imperial gas meter
  • The official Ofgem formula — explained in plain English
  • Step-by-step conversion for metric meters (m³ → kWh)
  • Step-by-step conversion for imperial meters (ft³ → kWh)
  • Full worked examples for both meter types
  • Quick estimate shortcuts for mental arithmetic
  • 7 common mistakes and how to avoid them
  • UK regional calorific values

What Are Gas Units?

A "gas unit" is simply the volume of natural gas your meter measures as it flows into your home. Your gas meter is essentially a volume counter — it measures how much physical gas passes through the pipe, not how much heat energy that gas delivers. The unit of measurement depends on the type of meter you have.

📊 Metric Meter (m³)

  • 1 unit = 1 cubic metre (m³)
  • Display shows 5 digits before decimal
  • Labelled "m³", "M" or shows ³ symbol
  • Standard in UK homes since mid-1990s
  • 1 m³ ≈ 11.18 kWh (at avg CV)
  • Most common type in UK today

🔢 Imperial Meter (ft³)

  • 1 unit = 1 cubic foot (ft³)
  • Display shows 4 digits, often with dials
  • Labelled "ft³", "CF", "cubic feet" or "Hcf"
  • Common in pre-1990s UK homes
  • 1 ft³ ≈ 0.317 kWh (at avg CV)
  • Must convert ft³ → m³ first

Your energy bill always charges you in kilowatt hours (kWh) — not in m³ or ft³. This is because the same volume of gas can contain slightly different amounts of heat energy depending on its composition, temperature and pressure. The conversion from volume to energy ensures every household is billed for the actual heat energy delivered, not just the physical volume of gas. All UK suppliers are legally required by Ofgem to use the same conversion formula.

The Official Ofgem Conversion Formula

Ofgem mandates a single conversion formula used by every UK domestic gas supplier — British Gas, Octopus Energy, EDF, Scottish Power, E.ON Next and all others. Understanding this formula means you can independently verify any gas bill in under two minutes.

🇬🇧 Ofgem Formula — Metric Meter (m³)
kWh = m³ × Calorific Value × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6
Current − previous meter reading
Calorific ValueFrom your bill · UK avg 39.5 kWh/m³
1.02264Volume Correction Factor (Ofgem)
÷ 3.6Converts MJ → kWh
🔢 Ofgem Formula — Imperial Meter (ft³)
kWh = ft³ × 0.0283168 × Calorific Value × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6
ft³Current − previous meter reading
× 0.0283168Converts cubic feet → m³
Calorific ValueFrom your bill · UK avg 39.5 kWh/m³
1.02264Volume Correction Factor

Why the Formula Has Four Parts

How to Convert Gas Units to kWh — Metric Meter (m³)

Follow these five steps if your gas meter display shows m³, M or a ³ symbol. This covers the vast majority of UK homes with meters installed since the mid-1990s.

1

Find Your Gas Meter Readings

Locate your current gas meter reading — either on the physical meter or in your supplier's app if you have a smart meter. Write down the number shown before the decimal point (ignore any red digits). Your previous reading will be on your last bill or in your account's billing history.

Current reading: 1,250 m³ Previous reading: 1,164 m³ ───────────────────────── Units used: 86 m³
If your meter reading has rolled over (gone from 9,999 back to 0), add 10,000 to your current reading before subtracting.
2

Find Your Calorific Value

Look for "calorific value", "CV" or "energy content" in the billing breakdown section of your gas bill. Your supplier is legally required to print it. It will be a number between 37.0 and 43.0 — either in kWh/m³ (preferred) or MJ/m³. If shown in MJ/m³, divide by 3.6 to convert.

Bill example: "Calorific value: 39.5 kWh/m³" or: "Energy content: 142.2 MJ/m³" ÷ 3.6 = 39.5 kWh/m³ ✓
Can't find your CV? Use 39.5 kWh/m³ (UK national average). Your result will be within 2–3% of your actual bill for most regions.
3

Multiply m³ by Calorific Value

Multiply your units used by the calorific value. This gives you the energy in the gas before correction for pressure and temperature conditions at your meter.

86 m³ × 39.5 kWh/m³ = 3,397.0
4

Multiply by Volume Correction Factor (1.02264)

Multiply the result by 1.02264 — Ofgem's standardised volume correction factor. This is always 1.02264 for UK domestic gas bills. You never need to calculate or look up this number.

3,397.0 × 1.02264 = 3,473.94
5

Divide by 3.6 to Get kWh

Divide by 3.6 to convert from the megajoule intermediate value to kilowatt hours. This is your final answer — the kWh figure that should match your bill's "energy used" line.

3,473.94 ÷ 3.6 = 964.98 kWh ✓
To calculate your bill cost: multiply kWh by your unit rate in pence, add standing charge × days, then add 5% VAT. Use our gas bill calculator.
📊 Full Worked Example — Metric Meter (86 m³, UK Average Monthly)
Current reading1,250 m³
Previous reading1,164 m³
Units used86 m³
Calorific value39.5 kWh/m³
Step 1: 86 × 39.5= 3,397.0
Step 2: × 1.02264= 3,473.94
Step 3: ÷ 3.6= 964.98 kWh
Energy Used 964.98 kWh

How to Convert Gas Units to kWh — Imperial Meter (ft³)

Use these steps if your gas meter shows ft³, CF, cubic feet or Hcf. Imperial meters are common in UK homes built before the 1990s, particularly terrace houses, flats and older semi-detached properties. The process has one extra step compared to a metric meter — you must first convert cubic feet to cubic metres.

1

Read Your Imperial Gas Meter

Note down the current reading in cubic feet. Imperial meters typically have four dials or a digital display showing four main digits. Read dials left to right, taking the lower number when a needle sits between two digits. Ignore any red dials. Subtract your previous reading to find units used.

Current reading: 14,250 ft³ Previous reading: 13,820 ft³ ───────────────────────────── Units used: 430 ft³
2

Convert Cubic Feet to Cubic Metres

Multiply your cubic feet reading by 0.0283168 to convert to cubic metres. This is the standard conversion factor (1 cubic foot = 0.0283168 m³). Your bill may show this step as "multiply by 2.83 and divide by 100" — it's the same thing.

430 ft³ × 0.0283168 = 12.176 m³
Some bills show this as: ft³ × 2.83 ÷ 100 = m³. Both give the same result.
3

Find Your Calorific Value

Locate the calorific value on your gas bill — exactly as described for metric meters above. The same CV applies regardless of your meter type. UK average is 39.5 kWh/m³.

Calorific value from bill: 39.5 kWh/m³
4

Apply the Ofgem Formula

Now your reading is in m³, apply the same formula as a metric meter: multiply by the calorific value, then by 1.02264, then divide by 3.6.

12.176 m³ × 39.5 × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6 = 12.176 × 39.5 = 480.95 480.95 × 1.02264 = 491.84 491.84 ÷ 3.6 = 136.62 kWh
5

Verify Against Your Bill

Your calculated kWh should match the energy used figure on your bill. A difference of up to 2–3 kWh is normal due to rounding in the calorific value. A larger difference usually means your supplier used an estimated reading or applied a different CV for part of the billing period.

Our calculation: 136.62 kWh Bill shows: 136.8 kWh Difference: 0.18 kWh ✓ (within tolerance)
🔢 Full Worked Example — Imperial Meter (430 ft³)
Current reading14,250 ft³
Previous reading13,820 ft³
Units used430 ft³
Step 1: 430 × 0.0283168= 12.176 m³
Calorific value39.5 kWh/m³
Step 2: 12.176 × 39.5= 480.95
Step 3: × 1.02264= 491.84
Step 4: ÷ 3.6= 136.62 kWh
Energy Used 136.62 kWh

⚡ Skip the Maths — Use Our Free Calculator

Our calculators apply the full Ofgem formula automatically. Just enter your readings and get your kWh result instantly — with a complete formula breakdown showing every calculation step.

Quick Estimate Shortcuts (No Calculator Needed)

When you need a rough figure without going through the full formula — for a quick sanity check on your bill or a mental estimate — these simplified multipliers work within 2–4% for most UK regions.

⚡ Quick Conversion Shortcuts (UK 2026)

📊 Metric Meter (m³)
m³ × 11.2 ≈ kWh
Example: 86 m³ × 11.2 = 963 kWh
Actual: 964.98 kWh (error: 0.2%)
🔢 Imperial Meter (ft³)
ft³ × 0.318 ≈ kWh
Example: 430 ft³ × 0.318 = 136.7 kWh
Actual: 136.62 kWh (error: 0.06%)
🔄 kWh Back to m³
kWh ÷ 11.2 ≈ m³
Example: 965 kWh ÷ 11.2 = 86.2 m³
Use for reverse estimates only
📅 Daily Usage Estimate
kWh ÷ days = kWh/day
Example: 965 kWh ÷ 30 days = 32.2 kWh/day
UK avg: 31–40 kWh/day in winter

UK Regional Calorific Values 2026

The calorific value (CV) is the single most important variable in the gas-to-kWh conversion. Using the wrong CV — or ignoring it entirely and just multiplying by a round number — introduces billing errors. The table below shows typical ranges by UK region. Always use your bill's stated CV for exact results.

UK Region CV Range (kWh/m³) Band kWh per m³ (avg) kWh per ft³ (avg)
🇬🇧 UK National Average38.5 – 40.5Average≈ 11.18 kWh≈ 0.317 kWh
London & South East39.0 – 41.5Above Avg≈ 11.44 kWh≈ 0.324 kWh
South West England38.8 – 41.0Average≈ 11.34 kWh≈ 0.321 kWh
East Anglia & East Midlands39.0 – 40.8Average≈ 11.34 kWh≈ 0.321 kWh
West Midlands38.5 – 40.5Average≈ 11.18 kWh≈ 0.317 kWh
Yorkshire & Humber38.0 – 40.2Average≈ 11.11 kWh≈ 0.315 kWh
North West England37.8 – 40.0Below Avg≈ 11.06 kWh≈ 0.313 kWh
North East England37.5 – 39.8Below Avg≈ 10.98 kWh≈ 0.311 kWh
Scotland (Central)37.5 – 40.0Below Avg≈ 11.01 kWh≈ 0.312 kWh
Scotland (North)37.2 – 39.5Below Avg≈ 10.90 kWh≈ 0.309 kWh
Wales38.0 – 40.2Average≈ 11.11 kWh≈ 0.315 kWh
Northern Ireland38.0 – 40.0Average≈ 11.08 kWh≈ 0.314 kWh

kWh per unit values calculated using mid-range CV, VCF 1.02264 and dividing by 3.6. ft³ values additionally apply 0.0283168 ft³→m³ conversion. Source: National Grid Gas Transmission. Seasonal variation ±1.5 kWh/m³ typical.

7 Common Mistakes When Converting Gas Units to kWh

These are the errors that most frequently cause a calculated kWh to differ significantly from the bill figure — and in some cases, cause people to miss genuine billing errors.

Using 11 or 11.2 as a fixed multiplier
Multiplying m³ × 11 or × 11.2 is a rough shortcut, not the official formula. It ignores your actual calorific value, which can be 10–15% higher or lower than the average. On a 200 m³ monthly bill, this can cause a £6–12 discrepancy. Always use your bill's stated CV.
Forgetting to convert ft³ to m³ first
Applying the Ofgem metric formula directly to cubic feet readings produces a result that is 35× too small (since 1 ft³ = 0.0283168 m³). Always multiply ft³ by 0.0283168 before applying the CV and VCF. This is the most common error with imperial meters.
Including the red digits or decimal digits
Gas meter displays typically show 5 white/black digits followed by red digits or digits after a decimal point. The red and decimal digits are tenths and hundredths of a unit — your bill uses whole units only. Including them inflates your reading by up to 100× depending on the digits shown.
Omitting the Volume Correction Factor
Calculating kWh = m³ × CV ÷ 3.6 (missing the 1.02264 VCF) underestimates your result by 2.264% — about 22 kWh on a typical monthly bill. This is small but compounds over a year (≈264 kWh, worth ~£20 at 2026 rates).
Using the wrong calorific value
Using last quarter's CV when this quarter's has changed introduces error. CVs change quarterly and seasonally. Always use the CV stated on the specific bill you're verifying. If your supplier applied two different CVs within one billing period (common at price cap change dates), your bill will show both.
Comparing against an estimated bill
If your supplier issued an estimated bill (no actual meter reading taken), the kWh figure on that bill is also an estimate based on historical patterns. Your manual calculation from actual readings will differ — this is correct and expected. Provide an actual reading to your supplier to trigger a corrected bill.
Expecting an exact match to the penny
Even with the correct formula, slight rounding differences in CV (e.g. 39.5 vs 39.47 kWh/m³) can cause 1–5 kWh variation per month. A perfect match to within 1–2 kWh is excellent. Only investigate if the difference exceeds 5 kWh on a monthly bill or 20 kWh on a quarterly one.

How to Read Your Gas Meter

Reading a Digital Metric Meter

Digital metric meters display a row of digits on an LCD or LED screen. Read the 5 digits shown in black or white from left to right — these are your cubic metre reading. Ignore any digits shown in red, after a decimal point, or labelled as "× 10". If your display cycles through multiple readings, the gas consumption reading is usually labelled "V1" or shown first in the cycle.

Reading an Old-Style Imperial Dial Meter

Imperial dial meters have a row of dials, each numbered 0–9. Read them left to right. For each dial: if the needle is between two numbers, write down the lower number. If the needle appears to be exactly on a number, write it down but check the dial to the right — if that dial hasn't yet reached zero, subtract one from your reading. Ignore any red dials. The result is your reading in hundreds of cubic feet (Hcf) or cubic feet (ft³) depending on the meter model.

Reading a Smart Meter

Smart meters have a digital display that automatically sends readings to your supplier. Your In-Home Display (IHD) unit shows gas usage in kWh directly — the conversion has already been done by the meter's software. If your IHD shows m³ instead of kWh, press the "B" button or cycle through screens until you find the kWh view. For manual verification, note the m³ reading shown and apply the steps in this guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert gas units to kWh in the UK?
For a metric meter (m³): kWh = m³ × Calorific Value × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6. For an imperial meter (ft³): first multiply ft³ × 0.0283168 to get m³, then apply the same formula. The calorific value (UK average 39.5 kWh/m³) is on your gas bill. Or use our free gas units to kWh calculator which handles both meter types automatically.
What is a gas unit in the UK?
A gas unit is the volume of gas measured by your meter: 1 unit = 1 m³ on a metric meter, or 1 unit = 1 cubic foot (ft³) on an imperial meter. Your bill converts these volume units to kWh for charging purposes, since the same volume of gas can contain different amounts of heat energy depending on composition, temperature and pressure.
How many kWh are in one unit of gas?
For a metric meter: 1 unit (1 m³) ≈ 11.18 kWh at the UK average calorific value of 39.5 kWh/m³. For an imperial meter: 1 unit (1 ft³) ≈ 0.317 kWh. These values vary by region — see the regional CV table above. Northern Scotland averages closer to 10.9 kWh/m³ while London can reach 11.5+ kWh/m³.
How do I know if I have a metric or imperial gas meter?
Check the label on your meter: Metric meters show "m³", "M" or a superscript ³ and display 5 main digits. Imperial meters show "ft³", "CF", "cubic feet" or "Hcf" and typically show 4 digits or have mechanical dials. Your gas bill will also state whether usage is in m³ or ft³. Homes built or renovated since the mid-1990s almost always have metric meters.
What is the Ofgem formula for converting gas to kWh?
The official Ofgem formula is: kWh = m³ × Calorific Value × 1.02264 ÷ 3.6. Every UK regulated gas supplier must use this formula by law. The calorific value (37.0–43.0 kWh/m³) accounts for the energy content of your local gas. The VCF of 1.02264 corrects for meter conditions. Division by 3.6 converts megajoules to kWh. See the full step-by-step guide above.
Where do I find the calorific value on my gas bill?
Look in the "how we calculate your charges", "bill breakdown" or "usage details" section. It's labelled "CV", "calorific value", "energy content" or "heat value" — shown between 37.0 and 43.0, in kWh/m³ or MJ/m³ (divide MJ/m³ by 3.6 to convert). All UK suppliers are legally required to display it. If you can't find it, use 39.5 kWh/m³ as the national average for a close approximation.
Why does my gas bill show kWh when my meter shows m³?
Your meter measures volume (how much gas flowed through the pipe). Your bill charges for energy (how much heat that gas delivers when burned). The same volume of gas contains slightly different amounts of energy depending on its source, composition and the temperature at your meter. The Ofgem formula converts volume to energy so every household is billed fairly for actual heat delivered — not just gas volume. See our M3 to kWh calculator for an instant conversion.
How do I convert gas units to kWh without a calculator?
For a quick mental estimate with a metric meter: multiply m³ × 11.2. Example: 50 m³ × 11.2 = 560 kWh (actual: 559.2 kWh — error under 0.2%). For an imperial meter: multiply ft³ × 0.318. These shortcuts are accurate within 2–4% for most UK regions. For an exact result that matches your bill, use the full formula or our free gas units to kWh calculator.