A brewing mash efficiency calculator for all-grain and BIAB homebrewers. Enter your grain bill with PPG values, your measured pre-boil OG and your wort volume and the tool instantly tells you your mash efficiency percentage, how many gravity points you actually collected versus the theoretical maximum, and how to correct your collection volume to hit any target gravity on your next brew day.
How it works
Mash efficiency is defined as:
Efficiency (%) = (Actual Points Collected) / (Maximum Possible Points) × 100
Step 1 — Maximum possible points. For each grain in your bill the calculator multiplies its weight in pounds by its PPG (Points Per Pound per Gallon). PPG is the laboratory-measured maximum extract assuming perfect hot-water conversion. For a 10 lb charge of 2-row pale malt at 37 PPG the maximum contribution is 370 gravity-points.
Step 2 — Actual points collected. Your OG reading is converted to gravity points: a reading of 1.052 becomes 52 points per gallon. Multiply by your collected volume in gallons and you have the total points sitting in the kettle. If you collected 5.5 gal at 1.052 you have 52 × 5.5 = 286 gravity-points.
Step 3 — Efficiency. Divide actual by maximum and multiply by 100. If your grain bill could theoretically give 370 points and you collected 286, your efficiency is 286 / 370 = 77.3% — a solid all-grain result.
Metric users can enter weights in kg and volumes in litres. Internally the calculator converts to US units for the PPG multiplication, then converts back for display — the result is mathematically identical.
Worked example
Recipe: American Pale Ale, targeting 5.5 gal at 1.052.
| Grain | Weight (lb) | PPG | Max points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-Row Pale Malt | 10 | 37 | 370 |
| Crystal 60L | 1 | 34 | 34 |
| Total | 11 | 404 |
You collect 5.5 gal and measure pre-boil OG 1.049 (49 points):
- Actual points = 49 × 5.5 = 269.5
- Max possible = 404
- Efficiency = 269.5 / 404 = 66.7% — below average
To hit 1.052 at the same 66.7% efficiency you would need to collect 5.5 × (49/52) × (52/49) — or simply use the built-in volume corrector, which gives 5.2 gal as your new target (you should not boil off as much, or sparge more thoroughly).
Formula note
The formula uses PPG as specified by the American Homebrewers Association and Brewer’s Friend convention. Metric equivalents use PPL (Points Per Litre) = PPG × 0.1198, but since the ratio (actual / max) is unitless the percentage is the same regardless of which system you use. If your malt supplier lists hot-water extract as a percentage (common in UK/European spec sheets), convert it with: PPG = HWE% × 46.2. Maris Otter at 81% HWE → 37.4 PPG, consistent with the 38 PPG used here.