About Us

How many liters of fuel does your car hold? Simple question. But try finding the answer quickly. The owner's manual is lost somewhere. Forums have dozens of different opinions. Official websites bury this information among thousands of other specifications.

What We Do

We provide clear answers about fuel tank capacities. From classic sedans to the latest hybrids. Every number is a specific volume for a specific car from a specific model year.

No "approximately" or "on average." Only precise data in gallons and liters.

Who Needs This

Planning a long trip? Calculate how many times you'll need to refuel. Where to stop. How much the fuel will cost for the entire journey.

Buying a car? Compare not just fuel consumption, but driving range too. Sometimes a more efficient engine with a small tank means more frequent stops at gas stations.

Tracking expenses? Accurate tank capacity data helps calculate fuel budgets correctly. Especially if you have several different vehicles.

Working at an auto shop? Quick reference always at hand. No need to flip through technical documentation or call the dealer.

Why Tank Size Matters

A large tank isn't always good. More fuel means more weight. And more weight means higher consumption. But a small tank has downsides too. Frequent refueling takes time. On highways between cities, this can become a problem.

The optimal size depends on your needs. For city driving, a compact tank works fine. For travelers — the bigger, the better. The key is knowing exact numbers to make informed decisions.

How to Use

Three steps to your answer:

  1. Select your car make
  2. Find your model
  3. Look up the year

You'll get a table with all trim options and their corresponding volumes. If the tank changed over the production years — you'll see all variants.

Details Worth Knowing

Manufacturers sometimes change tank volume even without changing the model generation. Various reasons: new environmental standards, space optimization, adding hybrid systems. That's why the model year is a critical parameter.

Differences between trims exist too. All-wheel-drive versions might have different tanks than front-wheel-drive ones. Diesel and gasoline variants — also different.

Just the Facts

We don't sell cars. We don't advertise gas stations. We don't promote any brand. We simply collect and organize technical data that's somehow hard to find in one place.

We believe basic information about your car should be accessible without extra effort. That's why we created this resource. Feel free to use it.