Wort Boil Concentration Factor

Calculate how much gravity increases as wort boils down

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The boil is where pre-boil gravity becomes original gravity. As water evaporates, the sugars left behind concentrate and the gravity climbs. This calculator predicts exactly where your gravity will land, so you can hit your numbers instead of discovering a miss after flameout.

How it works

Sugar does not evaporate, so the total dissolved extract is fixed. Expressed in gravity points (an SG of 1.050 is 50 points), the product of points and volume is conserved through the boil:

points_pre × volume_pre = points_post × volume_post

Rearranging gives the post-boil gravity:

points_post = points_pre × (volume_pre / volume_post)

The ratio volume_pre / volume_post is the concentration factor. Boil 7 gallons down to 6 and the factor is 1.167, lifting a 1.045 wort (45 points) to about 1.053 (53 points).

Two ways to get the final volume

You may already know the post-boil volume, in which case enter it directly. More often you plan a boil by its evaporation rate and time: a kettle that loses 1 gallon per hour over a 90-minute boil sheds 1.5 gallons. The tool derives the post-boil volume from rate times time, then applies the concentration formula.

Tips and notes

Measure your evaporation rate once by boiling a known volume of water for an hour and noting the loss; it is repeatable for that kettle and burner. If a pre-boil reading comes in low, a longer or more vigorous boil concentrates it toward target; if it comes in high, shorten the boil or add water at flameout. Because the concentration factor is known in advance, you can plan these corrections rather than chase the gravity. All calculation runs locally in your browser.

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