Skip to content
Home » Math » Volume – Math formulas

Volume – Math formulas

🧮 Understanding Volume Formulas

The volume formula is used to calculate the amount of space a 3D shape occupies. Each geometric solid — such as a cube, cylinder, cone, or sphere — has a unique formula based on its dimensions. Learning how to apply these geometry volume formulas helps students and professionals measure capacity, design objects, and solve real-world math problems.

Our table below lists the most common volume formulas for key geometric shapes, complete with diagrams, clear equations, and short explanations. From simple cubes to complex cones, each formula shows the relationship between height, radius, and base area. Whether you’re studying geometry or working on engineering and design tasks, this guide makes understanding volume formulas quick and practical.


Shape Image Formula Short description
Cube Isometric cube V = a³ Volume equals the cube of the side length.
Parallelepiped Parallelepiped V = a × b × c × sin(θ) Product of edge lengths and sine of included angle.
Regular Prism Triangular prism V = B × h Base area multiplied by prism height.
Cylinder Cylinder icon V = πr²h Circle area of base times height.
Cone Cone icon V = (1/3)πr²h One-third of a cylinder with same base and height.
Sphere Sphere icon V = (4/3)πr³ Volume proportional to the cube of the radius.