Convert 6 PPM to mg/L | 6 ppm = 6 mg/L

Quick Answer: 6 ppm = 6 mg/L

Scope: This converter is for liquid solutions. Do not use it for gas-phase ppmv conversions, which depend on temperature, pressure, and molecular weight.

Parts per million
=
Milligrams per liter
Auto-fills density
Default: 1.000 (practical approximation for dilute aqueous solutions)
Conversion Result
6 ppm = 6 mg/L

For aqueous solutions (density = 1 kg/L)

6 ppm = 6 mg/L

Step-by-step:

  1. For water (density ≈ 1 kg/L): 1 ppm = 1 mg/L
  2. Therefore: 6 ppm × 1 = 6 mg/L

Note: ppm equals mg/L only when the solution density is approximately 1 kg/L (true for most dilute aqueous solutions). For denser solutions like concentrated sulfuric acid (1.839 kg/L) or brine, use the substance selector or enter a custom density above.

Similar PPM to mg/L Conversions

Values close to 6 ppm for quick reference:

PPM mg/L Notes
1 ppm 1 mg/L Trace level
2 ppm 2 mg/L
3 ppm 3 mg/L
4 ppm 4 mg/L
5 ppm 5 mg/L
6 ppm 6 mg/L
7 ppm 7 mg/L
8 ppm 8 mg/L
9 ppm 9 mg/L
10 ppm 10 mg/L WHO chlorine limit (drinking water)
11 ppm 11 mg/L

See Also

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is 6 ppm in mg/L?

6 ppm equals 6 mg/L for water and dilute aqueous solutions (density ≈ 1 kg/L).

How do I convert 6 ppm to mg/L?

For water: 6 ppm = 6 mg/L (they are numerically equal). General formula: mg/L = ppm × density (kg/L).

Are ppm and mg/L always equal?

Only for water and dilute aqueous solutions where density ≈ 1 kg/L. For other solutions (concentrated acids, brines, organic solvents), multiply ppm by the solution density to get mg/L.

Method note: ppm (mass ratio) and mg/L (mass per volume) are numerically equal only for water-like solutions where density ≈ 1 kg/L — the common case for drinking water, dilute aqueous samples, and most environmental water quality data. For denser or less dense liquids, apply mg/L = ppm × density (kg/L). This page does not cover gas-phase ppmv, which depends on temperature, pressure, and molecular weight.

Density values for the substance selector are drawn from standard chemistry references; conversion factors follow ISO/NIST SI definitions. Figures are rounded for display — use the custom density field for higher precision.

Conversion factors verified against NIST, BIPM Based on SI definitions (BIPM). Last reviewed: March 2026
Tiago Fernandes Reviewed by Tiago Fernandes