Calculate exact amounts of concentrate and water for any dilution ratio. Supports cleaning products, chemicals, fertilizers, and medical solutions.
Getting dilution ratios wrong wastes concentrate, reduces effectiveness, or creates dangerously strong solutions. This dilution ratio calculator converts any ratio format (1:10, 10%, or parts) into exact volumes of concentrate and diluent (usually water) for your desired final volume.
Whether you're mixing cleaning chemicals, garden fertilizers, medical disinfectants, darkroom chemicals, or car wash soap, precise dilution matters. Too little concentrate is ineffective; too much is wasteful and can damage surfaces, harm plants, or pose safety risks.
This calculator handles standard ratio notation (1:32 means 1 part concentrate to 32 parts water), percentage concentration, and oz-per-gallon formats. It also provides a quick-reference table for common household and commercial products, conversion between ratio and percentage, and scaling up or down for different container sizes. That makes it easier to fill a spray bottle, mix a batch for a tank, or prepare a larger lot without redoing the math each time. The same ratio logic works whether you are measuring a small bottle or a larger mixing container.
Use this calculator when you need the exact concentrate and water amounts for a target volume instead of doing ratio math on the fly. It is helpful for cleaning products, detailing chemicals, garden mixes, and any other workflow where being slightly off can waste product or leave the mixture ineffective.
Concentrate = Total Volume ÷ (Ratio + 1). Diluent = Total Volume − Concentrate. For percentage: Concentrate = Total Volume × (Percentage ÷ 100). For ratio A:B, parts total = A + B, concentrate = Total × (A ÷ (A + B)).
Result: 3.88 oz concentrate + 124.12 oz water = 128 oz total
A 1:32 ratio means 1 part concentrate per 32 parts water = 33 total parts. For 128 oz: 128 ÷ 33 = 3.88 oz concentrate, remainder is water.
Household bleach for disinfecting: 1:48 (⅓ cup per gallon). All-purpose cleaners: 1:16 to 1:64. Car wash soap: 1:128 to 1:256. Garden fertilizer: varies widely, always follow label. Medical-grade disinfectant: depends on contact time and pathogen — follow manufacturer instructions exactly.
"1:10" and "1/10" and "1 to 10" all mean the same thing: 1 part concentrate to 10 parts diluent. Some products list "dilution factor" instead: a factor of 10 means 1 part concentrate plus 9 parts water (total factor of 10). This is different from 1:10 ratio!
Never mix different chemical concentrates. Bleach + ammonia creates toxic chloramine gas. Bleach + acids creates chlorine gas. When diluting strong chemicals, wear gloves and work in ventilated areas. Store concentrates separately from ready-to-use solutions.
1 part concentrate to 10 parts water (diluent). The total solution has 11 parts. So for 1 gallon (128 oz), you'd use 11.6 oz concentrate + 116.4 oz water.
No. 1:10 means 1 part out of 11 total = 9.1%. A 10% solution is 1:9 (1 part concentrate to 9 parts water). This is a common and dangerous confusion with cleaning chemicals.
CDC recommends 1:48 (⅓ cup per gallon) for general surface disinfection with standard 8.25% sodium hypochlorite bleach. For food contact surfaces, use 1:256 (1 tablespoon per gallon).
For ratio A:B, percentage = A ÷ (A + B) × 100. So 1:4 = 1/5 = 20%. And 1:99 = 1/100 = 1%.
Yes, as long as you're consistent. Ratios are unit-independent — 1:10 means 1 mL to 10 mL, or 1 oz to 10 oz, or 1 cup to 10 cups. The ratio stays the same regardless of unit.
Use the C1V1 = C2V2 formula (serial dilution). If your current solution is 10% and you want 2%, you need to dilute 1:4 further. This calculator gives the single-step dilution from concentrate.