Cold Brew Ratio Calculator

Calculate the perfect cold brew coffee ratio for concentrate and ready-to-drink. Covers steeping time, dilution, yield, and batch sizing for jars or pitchers.

Cold Brew Ratio Calculator

:1
hours
200g
coffee (7.1 oz)
+
1000 mL
water (34 oz)
โ†’
1200 mL
8.0 servings after dilution
Coffee Needed
200g (7.1 oz)
~1.7 cups ยท Use extra-coarse grind
Water
1000 mL (34 fl oz)
Cold or room-temperature filtered water
Concentrate Yield
600 mL
Grounds absorb ~400 mL water
After Dilution
1200 mL (41 oz)
8.0 servings of 150 mL
Steep Time
18 hours
Ideal range
Est. Cost
$8.00 per batch
~$1.00 per serving (at $40/kg beans)

Dilution Yield Table

DilutionFinal VolumeServingsEquiv. Brew RatioStrength
No dilution (straight)600 mL4.0~1:5
1:0.5 (light dilution)900 mL6.0~1:8
1:1 (standard dilution)1200 mL8.0~1:10
1:2 (mild / latte base)1800 mL12.0~1:15
1:3 (light / iced)2400 mL16.0~1:20

Steep Time Guide

HoursTempResultNotes
8-12hRoomLight, under-extractedToo short for most tastes
12-16hRoomBalanced, smoothSweet spot at room temp
16-20hFridgeFull, rich, smoothMost popular range
20-24hFridgeStrong, boldRisk of bitterness โ€” watch closely
24+hFridgeOver-extractedNot recommended โ€” bitter, woody
Planning notes, formulas, and examples

About the Cold Brew Ratio Calculator

Cold brew coffee is made by steeping coarsely ground coffee in cold or room-temperature water for 12-24 hours. The result is a smooth, low-acid, naturally sweet concentrate that can be diluted to taste and lasts 1-2 weeks in the fridge. The key variable is the coffee-to-water ratio during steeping, which determines whether you're making a concentrate (to be diluted) or a ready-to-drink brew (to be served as-is).

The most common cold brew ratio is 1:5 for concentrate (1 gram of coffee per 5 grams of water). This produces a strong, syrupy extract that's typically diluted 1:1 or 1:2 with water, milk, or ice before drinking. Ready-to-drink cold brew uses a weaker 1:8 to 1:12 ratio, brewed to drinking strength without dilution. The sweet spot for most people is a 1:5 concentrate diluted 1:1, which results in the equivalent of a 1:10 brew โ€” balanced, smooth, and versatile.

This calculator handles both approaches: enter your desired batch volume, choose concentrate vs. ready-to-drink, and it calculates the exact coffee and water amounts, plus yields after dilution. It accounts for the coffee grounds absorbing water (about 2ร— their weight), so the actual yield is always less than the water you start with.

When This Page Helps

Cold brew ratios are easy to misjudge because steep strength, dilution, and yield all move together. Use this calculator to dial in the grind-to-water mix for concentrate or ready-to-drink batches and avoid weak or over-extracted coffee.

How to Use the Inputs

  1. Choose between concentrate or ready-to-drink cold brew.
  2. Select your container size or enter a custom batch volume.
  3. Adjust the steep ratio to your preferred concentration.
  4. Set the dilution ratio for concentrate (1:1 is standard).
  5. View the coffee amount, water, steeping time, and final yield.
  6. Use the yield table to plan for multiple servings.
Formula used
Coffee (g) = Water (g) รท Ratio. Concentrate: ratio 1:4 to 1:6. Ready-to-drink: ratio 1:8 to 1:12. Water absorbed by grounds โ‰ˆ Coffee (g) ร— 2. Yield = Water โˆ’ Absorbed. Final volume after dilution = Yield ร— (1 + Dilution Ratio).

Example Calculation

Result: 200g coffee, 1000g water โ†’ 600mL concentrate โ†’ 1200mL after 1:1 dilution (8 servings)

1000g water รท 5 = 200g coffee. Grounds absorb 200 ร— 2 = 400g water. Yield: 1000 โˆ’ 400 = 600mL concentrate. Diluted 1:1: 600 + 600 = 1200mL = ~8 servings of 150mL.

Tips & Best Practices

  • Use extra-coarse grind โ€” like sea salt or peppercorns. Fine grind makes bitter, silty cold brew.
  • Room temperature steeping (12-16 hrs) extracts faster; fridge steeping (18-24 hrs) is slower but more forgiving.
  • Strain through a fine mesh sieve, then filter through a paper filter or cheesecloth for crystal-clear concentrate.
  • Cold brew concentrate is great for iced lattes: 1/3 concentrate + 2/3 milk over ice.
  • Make large batches โ€” concentrate keeps 2 weeks in the fridge and saves you daily brewing.

Concentrate vs. Ready-to-Drink

**Concentrate (1:4 to 1:6):** Thick, strong, syrupy. Must be diluted before drinking. Versatile โ€” mix with water, milk, ice, or use in cocktails. Stores longer (2 weeks). More efficient use of fridge space. **Ready-to-drink (1:8 to 1:12):** Brewed to drinking strength. Pour and serve over ice or straight. Simpler (no dilution step) but less versatile and shorter shelf life. Takes more fridge space per serving.

The Science of Cold Extraction

Cold water extracts different compounds than hot water. **What cold brew extracts well:** Caffeine (nearly equal to hot), sugars, chocolate/caramel notes, nutty flavors. **What cold brew extracts poorly:** Bright acidic compounds, delicate floral notes, certain fruity esters. This is why cold brew tastes smoother and less acidic than hot coffee โ€” it's literally missing the acidic compounds that hot water dissolves. For some beans (chocolatey, nutty origins like Brazil or Colombia), cold brew is ideal. For bright, fruity beans (Ethiopian, Kenyan), hot brew showcases the flavors better.

Container and Equipment Guide

**Mason jar method (beginner):** 32 oz mason jar + fine mesh sieve. Simple, cheap, produces 2-4 servings. **Pitcher method (medium batch):** 64 oz pitcher + nut milk bag or cheesecloth. Good for 6-10 servings. **Toddy/dedicated brewer (large batch):** Purpose-built cold brew systems with felt filters produce the cleanest concentrate. 12+ servings per batch. **French press:** Works great for cold brew! Fill with coarse grounds and cold water, steep, then press. Built-in filtration.

Sources & Methodology

Last updated:

Frequently Asked Questions

  • 1:5 for concentrate (dilute before drinking) or 1:8 for ready-to-drink (serve as-is over ice). Most people prefer the concentrate approach because it's more versatile โ€” you can dilute to any strength.