Coffee-to-Water Ratio Calculator

Get the perfect coffee ratio for any brew method — pour-over, espresso, French press and more.

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Getting the ratio of coffee to water right is the single biggest variable under your control when brewing at home. Too little coffee and you get a thin, sour, under-extracted cup; too much and it turns bitter and harsh. This calculator applies the standard ratios used by specialty-coffee professionals to give you an exact recipe for every major brew method — from a morning pour-over to a cold-brew concentrate.

How the ratio works

The coffee-to-water ratio is expressed as 1 : X, where 1 is one part coffee by weight and X is the number of parts water by weight. Because 1 ml of water weighs approximately 1 gram, you can treat grams and millilitres interchangeably for the water side.

The core formula is straightforward:

  • Water needed (given coffee) = coffee grams / ratio fraction
  • Coffee needed (given water) = water grams × ratio fraction

For example, at a 1:15 ratio:

  • 15 g of coffee → 15 / (1/15) = 225 ml of water
  • 300 ml of water → 300 × (1/15) = 20 g of coffee

The ratio fraction here is 1/15 = 0.0667 (grams of coffee per gram of water).

Brew method ratios at a glance

Different methods extract at different rates and produce different concentrations, so each has its own “sweet spot”:

MethodRecommended rangeTypical grindWater temp
Pour-over (V60, Chemex)1:12 – 1:18Medium-fine93 °C
French press1:11 – 1:17Coarse93 °C
AeroPress1:8 – 1:18Medium-fine to fine80 °C
Espresso1:1.5 – 1:2.5Very fine93 °C
Cold brew1:5 – 1:9CoarseCold (4–20 °C)
Moka pot1:6 – 1:10Fine90 °C
Drip / filter machine1:13 – 1:18Medium93 °C

Worked example — pour-over for two people

Suppose you want two 200 ml cups using a Hario V60 at a balanced 1:15 ratio:

  1. Total water = 2 × 200 = 400 ml
  2. Coffee needed = 400 × (1/15) = 26.7 g (round to 27 g)
  3. Bloom water = 27 × 2 = 54 g — pour this first, wait 35 seconds
  4. Remaining water = 400 − 54 = 346 g — pour in two or three controlled pours
  5. Total brew time: approximately 3 minutes 30 seconds

Result: a clean, bright cup sitting right in the SCA’s recommended extraction window.

The SCA “golden ratio”

The Specialty Coffee Association’s standard for brewed coffee calls for 55 g of coffee per litre of water — a 1:18.2 ratio. This is a baseline, not a rule. Light-roast coffees often taste better slightly stronger (1:15) because their acidity is pronounced; dark roasts can go lighter (1:17–1:18) without losing body. Treat the golden ratio as the midpoint of a spectrum, not a target to hit exactly.

Espresso: a different world

Espresso ratios refer to the brew ratio — the weight of dry grounds versus the weight of liquid espresso (the “yield”). A 1:2 ratio means 18 g of ground coffee produces 36 g of espresso in the cup. This is measured by placing the cup on a scale during extraction. The volume of a shot (roughly 30 ml for a double) is not the same as the yield weight because crema adds volume without proportional mass. Always weigh espresso output for accuracy.

Tips for dialling in

  • Start with the balanced preset for your method, taste, then adjust.
  • Grind size and ratio interact — if you make the grind coarser (faster flow, less extraction), compensate by using slightly more coffee.
  • Water quality matters — filtered water with moderate mineral content (around 150 ppm TDS) extracts more evenly than very soft or very hard water.
  • Scale beats scoops — a 0.1 g kitchen scale removes all guesswork; a tablespoon varies by 20–30% depending on how it is scooped.
  • Keep a brew log — note ratio, grind setting, and your tasting notes; tiny adjustments compound into a much better cup over a few sessions.
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