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Brew Lab

Coffee Grind Size Calculator & Chart

Every brew method wants a different grind size — measured in microns, not vibes. Pick a method and get its micron band translated into a real starting setting on your grinder.

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Highlights one grinder's row below and the "quick answer" line — every grinder is always calculated, this just picks which one to read first.

Settings are a starting point, not a guarantee. Burr wear, alignment, bean density and humidity all shift the real number by a click or two — dial in from here by taste (and, for espresso, shot time).

Micron ruler — method bands + grinder dials

400–700 µm

V60 / pour-over grind band

12.5–21.9 clicks

Comandante C40

26.7–46.7 clicks

1Zpresso (J/K-series)

8.6–17.1 setting

Baratza Encore

1.5–4.5 setting

Fellow Ode Gen 2

For V60 / pour-over on a Comandante C40, start at 12.5–21.9 clicks.

400–700µm V60 / pour-over
12.5–21.9 clicks Comandante C40

How the chart works

Two lookup tables, no simulation: a fixed micron band per brew method, and a straight-line model per grinder.

Method band

method → [min µm, max µm]

Grinder model

setting = (µm − offset) ÷ µm-per-step

Worked example: V60 / pour-over targets 400–700 µm. On a Comandante C40 (32 µm/click, clicks counted from fully closed) that’s 12.5–21.9 clicks. Every grinder in the table below runs through the same formula — only the µm-per-step and offset change, per that grinder’s own published or community grind chart (see the fine-print source note on each row of the full chart further down the page).

Worked examples

Espresso — 200–400 µm

Comandante C40
6.3–12.5 clicks
1Zpresso (J/K-series)
13.3–26.7 clicks
Baratza Encore
2.9–8.6 setting
Fellow Ode Gen 2
1–1.5 setting*

V60 / pour-over — 400–700 µm

Comandante C40
12.5–21.9 clicks
1Zpresso (J/K-series)
26.7–46.7 clicks
Baratza Encore
8.6–17.1 setting
Fellow Ode Gen 2
1.5–4.5 setting

French press — 800–1100 µm

Comandante C40
25–34.4 clicks
1Zpresso (J/K-series)
53.3–73.3 clicks
Baratza Encore
20–28.6 setting
Fellow Ode Gen 2
5.5–8.5 setting

* clamped to the grinder's dial — see the note in the readouts above.

The full coffee grind size chart

MethodMicron bandComandante C401Zpresso (J/K-series)Baratza EncoreFellow Ode Gen 2
Espresso200–400 µm6.3–12.5 clicks13.3–26.7 clicks2.9–8.6 setting1–1.5 setting*
Moka pot300–450 µm9.4–14.1 clicks20–30 clicks5.7–10 setting1–2 setting*
AeroPress400–700 µm12.5–21.9 clicks26.7–46.7 clicks8.6–17.1 setting1.5–4.5 setting
V60 / pour-over400–700 µm12.5–21.9 clicks26.7–46.7 clicks8.6–17.1 setting1.5–4.5 setting
Drip500–800 µm15.6–25 clicks33.3–53.3 clicks11.4–20 setting2.5–5.5 setting
Chemex600–850 µm18.8–26.6 clicks40–56.7 clicks14.3–21.4 setting3.5–6 setting
French press800–1100 µm25–34.4 clicks53.3–73.3 clicks20–28.6 setting5.5–8.5 setting
Cold brew1000–1400 µm31.3–43.8 clicks66.7–90 clicks*25.7–37.1 setting7.5–11 setting*

* clamped to the grinder's own dial range — see each grinder's source note below.

Comandante C40

Comandante C40 has no numbered dial — clicks are counted from fully closed (0). Community grind-chart consensus places its range at roughly 30-35 µm/click; we use 32 as a round mid-point.

1Zpresso (J/K-series)

1Zpresso J/K-series combine an external ring (coarse) with internal clicks (fine); most community-published charts report a combined effective resolution of roughly 12-18 µm per click across the full 0-90+ click range. We use 15 as a round mid-point.

Baratza Encore

Baratza Encore has 40 stepped settings (1-40). Third-party grind-chart comparisons (e.g. Baratza's own brew guides plus enthusiast measurements) place the range at roughly 150-1550 µm end to end; modeled here as a straight line through those endpoints.

Fellow Ode Gen 2

Fellow Ode Gen 2 has 11 numbered settings, purpose-built for filter coffee — Fellow's own materials describe it as spanning roughly fine pour-over to coarse cold brew. Modeled here as a straight line across that filter-focused range; it is NOT designed to reach true espresso fineness, which the calculator flags.

Why grind size is the biggest lever in your cup

Grind size controls how much surface area of ground coffee is exposed to water, and surface area is what controls extraction speed. A fine grind exposes far more surface area per gram than a coarse one, so water pulls flavor out of it much faster — which is exactly why espresso (25–32 seconds of contact) needs a grind fine enough to extract fully in that short window, while cold brew (12–24 hours of contact) needs a coarse grind so it doesn’t badly over-extract given all that extra time. Every method on the chart above sits somewhere on that same fine-to-coarse spectrum, sized to its own contact time.

Get the grind wrong in either direction and the fix is rarely "brew longer" or "use more coffee" — it’s almost always "change the grind." Too fine for a given contact time over-extracts: bitter, harsh, sometimes muddy with fines. Too coarse under-extracts: sour, thin, watery. This is the same under/over-extraction logic our Espresso Dial-In Lab diagnoses from shot time and taste — this tool is the chart that tells you where to start before you ever pull a shot.

Why the same "grind size" means a different number on every grinder

Microns are a physical, method-agnostic target — but grinders don’t expose microns on their dials. A Comandante C40’s clicks, a Baratza Encore’s 1–40 stepped dial, and a Fellow Ode Gen 2’s 1–11 numbers all mean completely different particle sizes at the "same" number, because each grinder’s burr geometry and adjustment mechanism moves the burrs apart by a different amount per click or step. "Setting 20" is meaningless without knowing which grinder it’s on — which is the entire reason a translator like this exists instead of a single universal number.

The model behind each grinder above is a straight line — microns as a function of the setting number — fit to that grinder’s published or community-measured grind chart (see the source note under each grinder in the full table). It is deliberately a simplification: real grinders aren’t perfectly linear across their whole range, especially near the very fine or very coarse ends, and two units of the same model can disagree by a click after burr wear or a re-seating. Treat every number here as a starting point for your OWN grinder, then adjust from there by taste.

Dialing in, method by method

Espresso (200–400 µm) is the finest common grind, close to table salt. Not every grinder can reach it — filter-focused grinders like the Fellow Ode Gen 2 top out well above true espresso fineness, which is exactly the kind of gap this calculator flags rather than papering over. If your shots taste sour or run fast even at your grinder’s finest setting, that grinder may simply not be capable of espresso.

Moka pot (300–450 µm) sits between espresso and pour-over — finer than drip, coarser than a true espresso puck, because a moka pot builds much less pressure than an espresso machine and needs a slightly coarser grind to avoid choking the funnel.

AeroPress and V60 / pour-over (400–700 µm) share a band — medium to medium-fine, like coarse sand. AeroPress’s shorter, often-pressurized brew tolerates a slightly wider range than a gravity-only V60; both benefit from a consistent, low-fines grind to avoid clogging the filter and slowing the drawdown unpredictably.

Drip (500–800 µm) and Chemex (600–850 µm) run progressively coarser — a Chemex’s thick proprietary filter paper already slows flow more than a standard drip cone, so a slightly coarser grind keeps total brew time from stretching into over-extraction territory.

French press (800–1100 µm) and cold brew (1000–1400 µm) are both full immersion, no paper filter, so a grind that’s too fine shows up twice — as over-extracted bitterness AND as gritty sediment at the bottom of the cup, since a metal mesh filter can’t catch fines the way paper does. Cold brew runs even coarser than French press because its steep time is measured in hours, not minutes.

Methodology & limitations

Full transparency on what this tool is and isn’t:

  • Micron bands are reference ranges, not laws. They're cross-referenced against SCA brewing guidance and the enthusiast-consensus ranges published across grinder makers' own grind charts — useful defaults, not a substitute for tasting.
  • Each grinder is a linear approximation, not a manufacturer-issued formula. Real burrs aren't perfectly linear at their extremes, and unit-to-unit variation is real. See each grinder's source note in the full chart above.
  • Bean density, roast level, and humidity all shift the real number. A dense light roast and an oily dark roast can need visibly different settings for the identical target micron size — this chart gets you in the neighborhood, your palate (and, for espresso, a scale and timer via the Dial-In Lab) gets you the rest of the way.
  • "Out of range" is a real, honest answer — some grinders simply cannot reach some bands (a filter grinder reaching true espresso fineness, for instance). The calculator clamps and flags this rather than showing a number that doesn't exist on your dial.

Once your grind is in the right neighborhood, our full grind-size-by-method guide and grinder buying guide go deeper on burr types and budgets, and our grinder maintenance guide covers the burr-wear and alignment issues that quietly drift a "correct" setting off target over months of use.

Frequently asked questions

What is a coffee grind size chart?
A grind size chart maps each brew method to the range of particle sizes (measured in microns, µm) that tends to extract well for it — roughly 200–400 µm for espresso up to 1000–1400 µm for cold brew. The chart above shows all 8 common methods on one shared scale, then translates each band into real dial settings on 4 popular grinders so you have an actual starting point, not just a picture.
What grind setting should I use for a V60 or other pour-over?
Pour-over (V60, Kalita, and similar drippers) targets roughly 400–700 µm — a medium-fine grind, similar to coarse sand or raw sugar. On a Comandante C40 that’s about 12.5–21.9 clicks; on a Baratza Encore, roughly settings 8.6–17.1. Use the calculator above (set method to "V60 / pour-over") to see the exact translated range for your specific grinder.
What grind size is best for espresso?
Espresso needs the finest grind of any common brew method — about 200–400 µm, close to table salt — because the short 25–32 second contact time under pressure needs maximum surface area to extract fully. Note that not every grinder can reach true espresso fineness: the Fellow Ode Gen 2, a filter-focused grinder, can't get fine enough on its lowest setting, which the calculator flags explicitly rather than showing a misleading number. Once your grind is in range, our Espresso Dial-In Lab (linked below) fine-tunes the shot itself by taste and time.
What grind size is best for a French press?
French press wants a coarse grind, roughly 800–1100 µm — about the texture of coarse sea salt or breadcrumbs. Immersion brewing has no paper filter to catch fine particles, so grinding too fine here causes both over-extracted bitterness and gritty sediment in the cup. On a Comandante C40 that’s about 25–34.4 clicks.
Why do different grinders need different settings for the same grind size?
Every grinder's burr geometry, RPM, and dial mechanism are different, so "click 20" on a Comandante and "setting 20" on a Baratza Encore land at completely different particle sizes — there's no universal number. That's the entire reason this tool exists: it translates a physical target (microns) into each grinder's own scale, instead of asking you to guess a number that only means something on someone else's machine.
Are these grinder settings exact?
No, and we'd rather say so plainly than pretend otherwise. Each grinder above is modeled as a straight line fit to its published or community-measured grind chart — a genuinely useful starting point, not a lab measurement. Burr wear, alignment, bean density, humidity, and unit-to-unit variation can all shift the real number by a click or two. Treat every range here as where to START dialing in, then adjust by taste and (for espresso) shot time with our Espresso Dial-In Lab.
What micron range is right for cold brew?
Cold brew uses the coarsest common grind, roughly 1000–1400 µm, because the long 12–24 hour steep time needs less surface area to avoid over-extracting into bitterness and sediment. It sits at the very top of most grinders’ ranges — on a Baratza Encore that’s about settings 25.7–37.1, near its coarsest setting.