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Brew Lab

Coffee to Water Ratio Calculator

Dial in the exact grams of coffee and water for V60, Chemex, drip or AeroPress — cup sizes, scoop estimates and the SCA golden ratio, worked out to the gram.

Brew method
Solve for
Cups
cups
Cup size
Strength (ratio) 1:16
Units
Golden zone
50.7 g

≈ 9½ level tbsp

811 ml

water to pour

710 ml

in your cup

50.7 g
811 ml

How the math works

Three formulas run this whole instrument. No hidden fudge factors — this is the entire model, honestly shown:

Dose

coffee = water ÷ R

Beverage

beverage = water − 2 × coffee

Solve from cup

water = beverage ÷ (1 − 2⁄R)

The "2" is the retention constant: ground coffee traps roughly 2 grams of water per gram of dry grounds, so the beverage that actually lands in your cup is always less than the water you poured. Scoops are estimated at 5.4 g of ground coffee per level tablespoon, rounded to the nearest quarter tablespoon.

Worked examples

V60 — 2 mugs @ 1:16

Water
811 g
Coffee
50.7 g
Beverage
710 ml
Scoops
≈ 9½ level tbsp

Chemex — 6 mugs @ 1:16.5

Water
2424 g
Coffee
146.9 g
Beverage
2130 ml
Scoops
≈ 27¼ level tbsp

AeroPress — 16 g @ 1:15 (bypass)

Total water
240 g
Chamber
220 ml
Bypass
20 ml
Coffee
16.0 g

Why ratios beat scoops

For decades, the standard coffee-making instruction was “two scoops per pot.” It’s the reason so much home coffee tastes inconsistent from one morning to the next — a scoop measures volume, and volume is a terrible proxy for the thing that actually matters: how much dry coffee mass hits the water.

Roast level alone can shift a scoop’s weight by around 15%: a dark roast bean has driven off more moisture and expanded more during roasting, so it’s measurably less dense than a light roast of the same variety. Grind size compounds the problem — a coarse French press grind settles into a scoop very differently than the fine, powdery grind you’d use for espresso. Run the numbers and one level tablespoon of coffee can weigh anywhere from 4 to 7 grams depending on roast and grind. That’s close to a 75% swing before you’ve poured a drop of water.

A gram of coffee, on the other hand, is always a gram of coffee. Weight is the only dose measurement that survives a change of roast, grind or brand — which is why every serious brewing method, from third-wave pour-over bars to the SCA’s own certification standard, is written in ratios of mass, not scoops of volume. A $15 kitchen scale removes more variance from your morning cup than any grinder upgrade.

The golden ratio, decoded

The Specialty Coffee Association’s Golden Cup Standard defines a target brewing strength of 55 grams of coffee per liter of water, with an acceptable range of ±10% — roughly 1:20 to 1:15.5 by weight. In everyday ratio notation (1 part coffee to R parts water), that band runs from about 1:18 on the gentle end to 1:15 on the strong end, with 1:16–1:17 sitting as the widely-used sweet spot most pour-over recipes converge on.

It’s worth separating two ideas that get conflated constantly: strength and extraction. Strength — measured as Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), typically 1.15%–1.45% for a balanced cup — is simply how concentrated your coffee is, and it’s controlled almost entirely by your ratio. Extraction — usually quoted as 18%–22% — is how much of the coffee’s soluble material you actually pulled out of the grounds, and it’s controlled by grind size, water temperature and contact time.

You can brew a cup that’s strong (low ratio, lots of coffee per liter) but under-extracted (sour, thin-tasting despite the strength) if your grind is too coarse for that ratio. You can just as easily brew something weak (high ratio) but over-extracted (bitter, hollow) with too fine a grind. The ratio sets how much coffee is in your cup; grind and time decide whether you pulled the right flavors out of it. Getting the ratio right is step one — necessary, but not sufficient, for a great cup.

Why you get less coffee than the water you pour

Pour 500 grams of water over your grounds and you will not get 500 grams of coffee in your cup. Ground coffee is porous, and every gram of dry grounds physically traps roughly 2 grams of water in its structure — swollen cell walls, tiny air pockets, the puck itself. That water never makes it past the filter.

Run the numbers: at a 1:16 ratio, 500 g of water dissolves 500 ÷ 16 = 31.3 g of coffee. That 31.3 g of grounds then retains about 2 × 31.3 = 62.6 g of the water you poured. Subtract that from your original 500 g and you’re left with 437 g of actual beverage in your cup — about 12.5% less than what you poured in.

This is exactly why “makes 4 cups” claims on a drip machine’s water reservoir disappoint you every time: the reservoir measures water IN, not coffee OUT. Nobody accounts for the retained water, so the promised volume never shows up in the carafe. The calculator above does this math for you in both directions — tell it the beverage you want, and it works backward to the water you need to pour.

Ratios by method

MethodTypical ratioWhy
V60 / pour-over1:15–1:17Full manual control over pour rate and bloom
Chemex1:16–1:17Thick paper filter needs slightly more water to avoid a muddy cup
Drip machine1:16Fixed flow rate and basket size leave little room to adjust
AeroPress1:14–1:16, or 1:5–1:6 + bypassShort contact time favors a stronger initial brew
Moka pot~1:10Fixed by the basket’s physical volume, not chosen
French pressIts own retention mathImmersion brewing traps more water than percolation — see the French Press Yield Adjuster

Two methods deserve a pointer to their own tool rather than a shortcut here. French press is an immersion method with a higher liquid-to-solid retention ratio than the roughly 2:1 percolation figure this calculator uses — the French Press Yield Adjuster accounts for that directly. And if you’re chasing a specific espresso ratio rather than a filter-coffee one, the Espresso Dial-In Lab works in the 1:2–1:2.5 range espresso actually lives in, with shot-time and flow-rate diagnostics this tool doesn’t cover.

Dialing strength without wrecking extraction

Say your current 1:16 pour-over tastes thin and you want more body. The instinct is to drop the ratio — 1:15, maybe 1:14 — and add more coffee per liter of water. That’s the right lever for strength. But it comes with a side effect: at a fixed grind size, packing more coffee into the same contact-time window over-extracts it, because more surface area is competing for the same amount of extraction time and turbulence. The result is often a cup that IS stronger but also tastes more bitter and tannic — the opposite of what “more body” usually means to a taster.

The fix is to move two variables together, not one. Lower your ratio for strength, and coarsen your grind slightly in the same step to hold extraction roughly constant. Push toward 1:17–1:18 for a lighter cup and you can afford to grind slightly finer without tipping into bitterness. Ratio and grind size move together, in the same direction, whenever you’re chasing strength without also chasing bitterness.

Drip machine “cups” are a lie

Look at the side of almost any drip coffee maker’s water reservoir and you’ll see numbered fill lines — 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 “cups.” Fill to the 12-cup line and brew, and you will not get twelve 8-ounce cups of coffee. You’ll get roughly 1,776 ml of water poured in at best, and less finished beverage once the grounds retain their share.

The reason: a drip machine’s “cup” marking is a 5-fluid-ounce (148 ml) unit — a holdover from an old US coffee-industry convention — not the 8-ounce cup you’d actually pour into a mug. Fill to “12 cups” and you’ve added 12 × 148 = 1,776 ml of water, which at a 1:16 ratio calls for 1,776 ÷ 16 = 111 g of ground coffee. After retention (roughly 2 g of water per gram of grounds), your carafe holds about 1,776 − 222 = 1,554 ml of actual coffee — enough for six or seven real 8-ounce mugs, not twelve.

None of this means your machine is broken. It means the fill lines were never measuring what you assumed. Use the Drip machine setting above, dial in the marker count you’re actually filling to, and get the honest water-and-coffee numbers instead of the reservoir’s optimistic label.

Frequently asked questions

What is the golden ratio for coffee?
The widely-used golden ratio is 1:16 to 1:17 coffee to water by weight — roughly 55 grams of coffee per liter, the middle of the Specialty Coffee Association’s Golden Cup Standard (55 g/L ±10%). Most pour-over recipes converge in the 1:15 to 1:18 range depending on how strong you like your cup.
How much coffee for 12 cups?
For a 12-cup drip machine (12 markers × 148 ml = 1,776 ml of water) at a 1:16 ratio, you need about 111 g of coffee. At the same ratio, 4 markers (592 ml) need about 37 g, 6 markers (888 ml) need about 55.5 g, 8 markers (1,184 ml) need about 74 g, and 10 markers (1,480 ml) need about 92.5 g.
How many tablespoons is 60 grams of coffee?
About 11 level tablespoons, using the standard 5.4 g-per-tablespoon conversion — though the real answer depends on your scoop, your grind, and your roast, which can each shift that number by a gram or more. A $15 kitchen scale removes that variance entirely and takes less time than hunting for a level tablespoon.
Is a 1:15 ratio stronger than 1:17?
Yes. A 1:15 ratio uses less water per gram of coffee than 1:17, so the resulting brew has a higher concentration of dissolved coffee solids — it’s objectively stronger. That’s a separate question from bitterness, though: a strong cup brewed with the right grind and contact time can taste balanced, while a weak cup that’s over-extracted can still taste harsh.
Do I weigh water or measure it in ml?
Either works — at typical brewing temperatures, 1 milliliter of water weighs almost exactly 1 gram, so volume and weight are interchangeable for this purpose. Most people find a scale easier and more precise than a measuring jug, especially for the smaller volumes a single pour-over demands.
What ratio for strong coffee?
Aim for 1:13 to 1:14, and grind slightly coarser than you would at 1:16 to keep the extra coffee mass from over-extracting in the same contact time. Going stronger than that without adjusting your grind usually reads as bitter rather than “strong” in the way you’re after.