Skip to main content

Brew Lab

French Press Calculator

Nobody else visualizes the water your grounds steal. Get the exact coffee and water for every press size, adjusted for the 2.2× retention immersion brewing traps — so your mug actually gets filled.

Solve for
Mugs
mugs
Mug size
Your press (for the fit check)
Strength (ratio) 1:15
Units
55.5 g

coffee to weigh out

832.0 g

water to pour

710 ml

in your mugs

122.0 g

lost to the grounds

Brew guidance

Grind
Coarse
Steep
4:00
Plunge
Just below surface
Decant
Immediately
55.5 g
832.0 g

How the math works

Three formulas run this whole instrument — no hidden fudge factors:

Water (mugs mode)

water = mugs × size ÷ (1 − 2.2/R)

Coffee

coffee = water ÷ R

Trapped

trapped = 2.2 × coffee

The 2.2 is immersion retention — higher than the roughly 2.0 a percolation bed (pour-over, drip) retains, because an immersion bed sits fully submerged the whole brew instead of draining continuously. And because a press only has so much room, the tool also runs a capacity check: usable volume = 85% of the press's stated size, leaving headroom for the grounds bed and the plunger's throw. Ask for more mugs than your press can physically deliver and the warning above tells you exactly by how much you're over, before you've wasted a scoop of coffee finding out the hard way.

Worked examples

2 mugs (355 ml) @1:15

Water
832 g
Coffee
55.5 g
In your mugs
710 ml
Lost to grounds
122 g

1 L (8-cup) press, filled @1:15

Water
850 g
Coffee
56.7 g
In your mugs
725 ml (≈ 2.0 real mugs)
Lost to grounds
125 g

3 mugs on a 1 L press @1:15 — won't fit

Water needed
1248 g
Press capacity
850 ml
Over by
398 ml
Fix
Size up, or brew 2 mugs at a time

The french press lie: "8-cup" makes two mugs

Look at the box a french press ships in and you'll see a serving count — "3-cup," "8-cup," "12-cup." Those numbers come from an old coffee-industry convention where one "cup" means 4 fluid ounces (about 118 ml), not the 12-ounce mug you actually drink from. Multiply that gap by immersion retention — the water your grounds trap and never release — and the honest yield falls even further behind the number on the box.

PressMarketing claimReal yield @1:15Real 355 ml mugs
350 ml"3-cup" (3 × 118 ml)254 ml≈ 0.7
500 ml"4-cup" (4 × 118 ml)363 ml≈ 1.0
1 L"8-cup" (8 × 118 ml)725 ml≈ 2.0
1.5 L"12-cup" (12 × 118 ml)1088 ml≈ 3.1

The worst offender is the one that sells the best: the classic 1 L "8-cup" press delivers about 725 ml of real beverage — roughly 2.0 standard mugs, not eight. It's not a defective press. It's a unit of measurement nobody bothered to translate, multiplied by a retention loss nobody accounts for. The calculator above skips both traps: tell it the real mugs you want, or the real press you own, and it solves in mugs and grams from the start.

Notice the pattern in the table: no matter which size you pick, the real 355 ml mug count lands at roughly a quarter of the marketing number. That ratio holds because both distortions scale together — a bigger press has proportionally more grounds, so it traps proportionally more water, and the 4 fl oz "cup" unit stays fixed regardless of press size. Buying a bigger press to serve more people works, but budget for real mugs, not the number silkscreened on the carafe. If you regularly brew for three or four people, size up past the "12-cup" line rather than trusting it to mean what it says.

Why immersion traps 2.2× the coffee's weight in water

Ground coffee is porous. Submerge it in water for four minutes — immersion brewing, as opposed to water draining continuously through a pour-over bed — and the grounds swell, trap water in their cell structure, and hold onto it even after you've plunged and poured. That retained water never crosses into your cup. For immersion methods (french press, cold brew) the figure lands around 2.2 g of water retained per gram of dry coffee, slightly higher than the roughly 2.0 g a percolation bed (pour-over, drip) retains, because percolation water is continuously flushed through rather than sitting static the whole steep.

Run the numbers on the default recipe: two 355 ml mugs need 710 ml of finished beverage. To deliver that after retention, you pour 832 g of water, which dissolves 55.5 g of coffee — and that coffee then traps 122 g of the water you poured, permanently. The fix is to stop planning forward from "how much water do I pour" and start planning backward from "how many mugs do I actually want." That's the entire design of the "Mugs I want" mode above: pick your mug count and size, and the calculator solves the water that survives retention to fill them.

Ratio for french press: reconciling 1:15 and 1:12

Search "french press ratio" and you'll find genuinely conflicting advice: some guides say 1:15, the same number used for pour-over; others insist on 1:12, noticeably stronger. Both are right, because they're measuring two different things. A ratio can describe the water you POUR IN, or the beverage that's actually DELIVERED once retention has taken its cut — and for an immersion method, those two numbers are meaningfully different.

This calculator's strength slider is a water-poured ratio, same convention as every other brew method on the site, so a recipe you set anywhere else compares apples to apples here. But look at what that recipe actually delivers: the default 2-mug example pours 832 g of water for 55.5 g of coffee — a 1:15 water ratio — yet only 710 ml of that water survives retention to reach the mug. Measured against what's actually IN the cup, that's a beverage strength of roughly 1:12.8. That number is nearly identical to the "1:12" a lot of french-press-specific sites recommend — because they're describing the same drink from the other side of the retention loss. Nobody's wrong. "1:15" and "1:12" are the water-poured and beverage-delivered descriptions of the same cup.

This is also why blindly copying a pour-over ratio onto a french press recipe under- delivers. Pour-over retains only about 2.0 g of water per gram of coffee — a percolation bed drains continuously, so far less water stays trapped — which means a 1:15 pour-over recipe delivers a beverage close to its nominal 1:15 strength. Run that same 1:15 on a french press and the extra 0.2 g/g of immersion retention quietly pulls the delivered beverage tighter, toward 1:12-13, without you changing a single input. The slider above already bakes the 2.2 figure in, so dialing to "1:15" here gives you the balanced result the number implies — you don't need to compensate for the method yourself.

The 4-minute method

Pour your measured water over the grounds and start a timer. At 4 minutes, break the crust that's formed on top with a spoon and give it a gentle stir — this releases trapped CO₂ and lets any floating grounds settle. Skim off the foam and stray grounds that rise to the surface; they'll turn bitter and gritty if left in the finished cup. Then lower the plunger slowly, stopping just below the surface of the coffee — don't press all the way to the bottom yet. This traps most of the fine sediment above the mesh without forcing hot coffee through a fully-packed bed, which over-extracts it. Decant immediately into a carafe or straight into your mugs; the grounds below the plunger are still saturated and hot, and they'll keep extracting for as long as the brewed coffee sits on top of them.

Skipping the stir-and-skim step is the single most common french press mistake. Without it, a layer of fine grounds and crema-like foam sits on the surface, and plunging simply drives that layer straight down through the bed instead of separating it out — the result is a cup with visibly more sediment and a muddier, less clean finish than the same recipe brewed with the full four-minute ritual. The stir costs ten seconds and changes the cup more than most grind or ratio adjustments do.

Grind: coarse, but not gravel

French press wants a coarse grind — visibly chunkier than drip, closer to coarse sea salt or breadcrumbs. Go too fine and the mesh disc can't filter it cleanly: fine particles slip past and settle as silt at the bottom of every cup, and the extra surface area over a four-minute steep pushes the brew toward bitter and muddy. Go too coarse (true gravel) and you'll under-extract into a thin, sour cup, because there isn't enough surface area for the water to pull sufficient flavor out in four minutes. A conical burr grinder with a dedicated coarse setting is the difference between a clean, full-bodied cup and a gritty one — see our burr vs. blade grinder comparison if you're still grinding with a blade.

Grind size also shifts the retention figure slightly, though not enough to change what number you dial into the calculator above. A coarser grind packs a looser bed with more space between particles, so it holds marginally less water per gram than a finer one; a too-fine grind swells into a denser, more water-retentive mass. The 2.2 g/g figure this tool uses is a practical middle-of-the-road number for a correctly coarse french press grind — another reason to stay in the coarse-but-not-gravel zone rather than drifting fine "for more strength," which both worsens sediment and quietly increases how much water you lose to the bed.

Beyond hot: french press as a cold brew vessel

The same mesh plunger that separates grounds from coffee after a hot immersion steep works just as well after a long, cold one. Load coarse grounds and room-temperature or cold water into the carafe, let it steep 12-24 hours in the fridge, then plunge to filter — no separate cold brew jar or filter sock required. The retention math is nearly identical (cold brew uses the same 2.2× immersion figure this calculator runs on), but the ratios and steep times are different enough that they deserve their own tool: our Cold Brew Planner handles batch sizing, concentrate ratios and dilution for exactly this workflow. Either way, the same red bracket in the instrument above is the number worth remembering: whatever your grounds keep, your mug never sees.

Frequently asked questions

How much coffee for a french press?
At the default 1:15 ratio: a 350 ml (3-cup) press needs about 19.9 g, a 500 ml (4-cup) needs about 28.3 g, the classic 1 L (8-cup) needs about 56.7 g, and a 1.5 L (12-cup) needs about 85.0 g. Those are all coffee doses for the press's full usable capacity (85% of its stated size) — use the "Mugs I want" mode above if you're brewing for a specific number of mugs instead of filling the press.
What is the coffee ratio for a french press?
1:15 by weight (one part coffee to fifteen parts water you pour in) is a solid default, adjustable from 1:12 (bold) to 1:17 (light) on the slider above. If you've seen other sites recommend 1:12 for french press specifically, that's not a contradiction — it's usually because they're describing the strength of the finished BEVERAGE, not the water poured. Retention eats roughly 2.2 g of water per gram of coffee, so a 1:15-by-water recipe actually delivers a beverage around 1:12.8 strength — nearly identical to "1:12". Same coffee, two different reference points.
How much coffee for a 1 liter french press?
About 56.7 g at our 1:15 default, using the press's full 850 ml usable capacity. That delivers 725 ml of real beverage — roughly 2.0 standard 355 ml mugs, not the eight servings the "8-cup" name implies. That gap is this calculator's whole reason for existing; see the honesty table below.
How long should french press steep?
4 minutes is the standard, and it's a good default for most coffees and grinds. Shorter (3:00-3:30) reads lighter and brighter; longer (4:30-5:00) reads heavier and risks tipping into harshness, since the grounds keep extracting the entire time they're in contact with water — there's no "done" switch the way a pour-over's drawdown gives you one.
Why does my french press make less coffee than I expect?
Immersion retention: the saturated grounds bed traps roughly 2.2 g of water per gram of dry coffee, and that water never reaches your mug. It's the entire thesis of this calculator — every french press recipe that only tells you the water to pour is silently overstating your yield by however much your grounds end up holding onto. Plan backwards from the mugs you actually want (the "Mugs I want" mode above) instead of eyeballing a water fill line.
Should you decant french press coffee?
Yes — immediately after plunging. The grounds sitting below the plunger disc are still fully saturated and still hot, and they keep extracting for as long as they're in contact with the brewed coffee above them. Leave a french press sitting post-plunge for ten or fifteen minutes and the cup will taste noticeably more bitter than the one you'd have poured right away. Decant the whole batch into a carafe or thermos if you're not drinking it all at once.