Find the perfect coffee-to-water ratio by brew method and strength. Supports grams, tablespoons, ounces, and cups with real-time unit conversion.
The coffee-to-water ratio is the most critical variable in brewing consistent, delicious coffee. The Specialty Coffee Association (SCA) defines the "golden cup" standard at 55 grams of coffee per liter of water (approximately 1:18), but this is a starting point — personal taste, bean roast level, and brewing method all influence the ideal ratio for your perfect cup.
Each brewing method has its own sweet spot. Pour-over extracts efficiently and works best at 1:15 to 1:17. French press needs a slightly lower ratio (more coffee per water, 1:14 to 1:16) to compensate for its less thorough extraction. Espresso is a different world entirely, using a 1:2 dose-to-yield ratio that produces a concentrated shot. Cold brew uses 1:5 to 1:8 because cold water is a less effective solvent, requiring more coffee to compensate.
This calculator lets you start from either direction: enter how much coffee you have and find the right water amount, or enter how much brewed coffee you want and find the coffee dose. It handles all common units (grams, tablespoons, ounces, cups) and lets you fine-tune the ratio for your personal preference.
Eyeballing coffee amounts leads to inconsistent results. Using a precise ratio and measuring by weight (grams) gives you the same great cup every time. Keep these notes focused on your operational context. Tie the context to the calculator’s intended domain. Use this clarification to avoid ambiguous interpretation. Align this note with review checkpoints.
Water (g) = Coffee (g) × Ratio. Coffee (g) = Water (g) ÷ Ratio. Unit conversions: 1 tbsp ground coffee ≈ 5.5g, 1 cup water = 236.6 mL = 236.6g, 1 fl oz water = 29.57 mL. SCA Golden Cup: 55g per 1000g water (1:18.2).
Result: 480g water (16.2 oz), makes ~13 oz brewed
30g coffee × 16 ratio = 480g water. Coffee absorbs ~2× its weight, so 480 − 60 = ~420g (14.2 oz) of brewed coffee in the cup.
**Pour-Over (V60, Chemex, Kalita Wave):** 1:15 to 1:17. The precision of pour-over means you can taste small ratio changes. Start at 1:16. **French Press:** 1:14 to 1:16. The metal mesh doesn't filter as cleanly as paper, so a slightly lower ratio balances the heavier body. **Drip / Auto:** 1:16 to 1:18. Auto-drip machines vary in how well they saturate the grounds. If yours brews unevenly, use more coffee (lower ratio). **AeroPress:** 1:10 to 1:16. The AeroPress is uniquely flexible — low ratios for concentrate + dilution, high ratios for American-style.
**Ratio controls strength** (how concentrated the brew is). A lower ratio (more coffee per water) = stronger brew. **Grind size and time control extraction** (what compounds are dissolved). Over-extraction = bitter, under-extraction = sour. You can have a strong but under-extracted brew (lots of coffee, coarse grind, short time) or a weak but over-extracted brew (little coffee, fine grind, long time). The goal is balanced extraction at your preferred strength.
For commercial settings or large batches: SCA recommends 55-60g per liter. A standard 12-cup American drip machine brews about 1.9 liters (64 oz) of water. That needs 105-115g of coffee (about 20 tablespoons). Most people drastically under-dose their drip machines, then wonder why the coffee tastes watery.
Starbucks typically uses about 10g per 6 oz cup, which is approximately a 1:18 ratio — on the lighter side of specialty coffee standards. Their bold taste comes from dark roasting, not extra coffee.
If coffee is too weak/watery, decrease the ratio (e.g., 1:16 → 1:14). If too strong/bitter, increase the ratio (1:16 → 1:18). Adjust in increments of 1 (one ratio point) and taste each time.
Use the tablespoon approximation: 1 level tablespoon of medium-ground coffee ≈ 5-6g. So for a 1:16 ratio with 12 oz water: 355g ÷ 16 = 22g ÷ 5.5 = 4 tablespoons.
Remember that coffee grounds absorb about 2× their weight in water. If you use 30g coffee and 480g water, only about 420g ends up in the cup. This is normal and expected.
For iced coffee brewed hot over ice: use 1:10 to 1:12 ratio (extra strong) since melting ice dilutes the brew by ~30%. For Japanese-style iced pour-over, 60% of water is poured hot, 40% is ice in the server.
Decaf can taste slightly flatter due to the decaffeination process removing some flavor compounds. Using a slightly lower ratio (1:14 instead of 1:16) compensates and produces a fuller-tasting decaf cup.