Coffee Brew Ratio Calculator
Calculate the perfect coffee to water ratio for any brew method.
Get exact gram measurements for pour-over, French press, drip, AeroPress, and cold brew.
The single most important variable in coffee brewing
Brew ratio — the relationship between coffee grounds and water — controls strength, extraction, and ultimately flavor more than any other single variable. Getting your ratio right is the foundation of great coffee, regardless of brew method.
The basic formula:
Brew ratio = Water (g) ÷ Coffee (g)
So 300g of water with 18g of coffee = 1:16.67 ratio (round to 1:17).
This works because water and coffee are weighed by gram — making the math universal regardless of measurement system. 1 gram of water = 1 mL = 0.034 fl oz, so the same recipe translates to any measurement system.
The “Golden Ratio” of filter coffee
The Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) defines the “Golden Cup Standard” — the ideal brewing parameters for filter coffee:
- Brew ratio: 1:18 (55g coffee per 1 liter water)
- Extraction yield: 18-22%
- Total dissolved solids (TDS): 1.15-1.35%
- Brew temperature: 200°F ± 5°F (93°C ± 3°C)
- Total brew time: 4-6 minutes (varies by method)
The Golden Cup is the international quality benchmark. Most specialty coffee shops worldwide target these parameters.
Brew ratios by method
Different brew methods optimize at different ratios:
| Method | Recommended ratio | Coffee for 500ml water |
|---|---|---|
| Espresso | 1:2 | 250g (impossible — espresso uses small water) |
| Espresso (yield 1:2) | Doesn’t apply | 18g coffee, 36g yield |
| AeroPress (concentrate) | 1:10 to 1:12 | 42-50g |
| AeroPress (standard) | 1:14 to 1:16 | 31-36g |
| Moka pot | 1:7 to 1:10 | 50-71g |
| Stovetop espresso | 1:8 to 1:10 | 50-63g |
| Turkish coffee | 1:10 to 1:12 | 42-50g |
| French press | 1:12 to 1:15 | 33-42g |
| Siphon/vacuum | 1:14 to 1:16 | 31-36g |
| Drip machine | 1:15 to 1:18 | 28-33g |
| Pour-over V60 | 1:15 to 1:17 | 29-33g |
| Pour-over Chemex | 1:16 to 1:18 | 28-31g |
| Cold brew (concentrate) | 1:4 to 1:8 | 63-125g |
| Cold brew (ready to drink) | 1:8 to 1:15 | 33-63g |
Why different methods need different ratios
The same beans produce different drinks via different methods because:
- Contact time: French press 4 min vs espresso 30 sec
- Pressure: espresso 9 bars vs filter atmospheric
- Water temperature: lower temps (cold brew) extract less per gram
- Grind size: espresso fine vs French press coarse
- Filter type: paper absorbs oils; metal allows oils through
These differences mean equivalent strength requires different coffee amounts.
Strength vs extraction — the two-axis problem
Coffee professionals think in two dimensions:
Strength (TDS): how much coffee solids are dissolved
- Weak: <1% TDS (watery)
- Medium: 1-1.5% TDS (standard filter)
- Strong: 1.5-2% TDS
- Espresso: 8-12% TDS
Extraction yield (%): percentage of coffee mass that ended up in the cup
- Under-extracted: <18% (sour, lacking body)
- Properly extracted: 18-22% (balanced)
- Over-extracted: >22% (bitter, ashy)
The relationship:
TDS = Coffee × Yield ÷ Water
You can have weak but over-extracted coffee (sour and watery). Or strong but under-extracted (acidic and intense). Or weak and properly extracted (balanced, light). Tuning both ratio and grind size lets you target both axes.
Adjusting strength with ratio
To make coffee stronger or weaker:
Stronger: lower ratio (e.g., 1:14 instead of 1:17)
- More coffee per water
- More body, intensity
- Easy to do but doesn’t change extraction
Weaker: higher ratio (e.g., 1:18 instead of 1:15)
- Less coffee per water
- Lighter body
- Some extraction sweet spot may shift
By diluting after brewing:
- “Café au lait” style: brew strong, dilute with hot water
- “Cup down” style: brew strong, drink small portions
- Reduces variables — extraction stays the same
Adjusting flavor with grind size
Grind affects extraction independently from ratio:
Finer grind:
- More surface area
- More extraction per second
- Can become over-extracted if too long
- Best for short contact methods (espresso)
Coarser grind:
- Less surface area
- Less extraction per second
- Less risk of over-extraction
- Best for long contact methods (French press, cold brew)
Same ratio with different grinds produces different cups. The interplay between grind and ratio is where coffee gets complicated.
The water side
Water quality dramatically affects coffee:
Minerals (TDS in water):
- 0-50 ppm: distilled, “flat” coffee
- 50-150 ppm: ideal for filter coffee (SCA recommends 75-150 ppm)
- 150-300 ppm: harder water, more body
- 300+ ppm: too hard, mineral taste
Specific minerals:
- Calcium and magnesium: enhance extraction
- Bicarbonate: balances acidity
- Sodium: usually neutral
pH: ideal 6.5-7.5 (slightly acidic to neutral)
For best coffee:
- Use filtered water (not distilled, not tap with chlorine)
- Specialty water brands (Third Wave Water, Black Water) for purists
- Brita filter removes chlorine and some minerals
The recipe by brew method (practical guide)
French press for 4 cups (1 liter water):
- Coffee: 67g (1:15 ratio)
- Water at 200°F
- Steep 4 minutes
- Plunge slowly
- Pour immediately to avoid over-extraction
Pour-over for 1 cup (300g water):
- Coffee: 18g (1:16.7 ratio)
- Water at 200°F
- Bloom 30 sec with 40g water
- Pour rest in 3 pulses over 3 minutes
- Total time: 3-4 minutes
Drip machine for full pot (1.5L water):
- Coffee: 85g (1:17.5 ratio)
- Use filtered water reservoir
- Brew runs 6-10 minutes typical
AeroPress standard recipe:
- Coffee: 14g (1:14 ratio with 200g water)
- Water at 175-185°F (lower than other methods)
- Steep 1 minute
- Press 30 seconds
- Total time: 1.5-2 minutes
Cold brew (concentrate):
- Coffee: 100g (1:6 ratio with 600g water)
- Steep 12-24 hours at room temp
- Filter
- Dilute 1:1 with water/milk when serving
Common ratio mistakes
- Volumetric measurement: scoops and cups vary; weigh by gram
- Same ratio everywhere: French press needs more coffee than pour-over
- Ignoring grind size: ratio alone doesn’t control everything
- Cold water: water below 195°F under-extracts
- Boiling water: water at boiling can over-extract
- Old beans: stale beans extract poorly regardless of ratio
- Same recipe for all roasts: light roasts need more coffee, water, or time
- Tap water: chlorine and minerals affect flavor
- Wrong filter: cheap paper filters absorb oils unevenly
- No bloom in pour-over: skipping CO2 release ruins extraction
Caffeine considerations
Caffeine per cup varies dramatically:
| Drink | Volume | Caffeine | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Espresso single | 30ml | 70-80mg | Concentrated |
| Espresso double | 60ml | 130-160mg | Standard café drink |
| Filter coffee | 240ml | 95-125mg | American “cup” |
| French press | 240ml | 80-100mg | Slightly less than filter |
| Cold brew | 240ml | 150-200mg | Higher caffeine |
| Decaf coffee | 240ml | 2-15mg | Trace amounts |
Stronger ratio = more caffeine per ml. Light roasts have slightly more caffeine than dark (roasting destroys some).
Bottom line
Brew ratio (water ÷ coffee, by gram) is the foundation of coffee consistency. Standard filter ratio: 1:15-1:17. French press: 1:12-1:15 (stronger). Pour-over: 1:15-1:17 (clean). Espresso: 1:2 (different paradigm). The SCA Golden Cup standard is 1:18 with 18-22% extraction yield. Adjust strength via ratio; adjust extraction via grind size. Use filtered water at 75-150 ppm TDS, brewed at 200°F. Cold brew uses 1:4-1:8 ratio because long extraction times compensate for cold water. Stronger ratio = more caffeine, more body, more bitterness if over-extracted. Most beginners’ coffee is too weak — start with 1:15 and adjust to taste.