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How to Use an AeroPress: The Complete Beginner’s Guide

AeroPress coffee maker. Photo by Elin Melaas on Unsplash.

The AeroPress is one of the simplest, most forgiving brewing methods you can own — and one of the most versatile. A medium-fine grind, hot water, 1 minute of steeping, 30 seconds of pressing, and you have a clean, full-bodied cup of coffee. The same gadget makes espresso-style concentrates, single-cup pour-overs, and cold brew.

This guide walks you through the AeroPress method from scratch — gear, grind, ratio, the standard recipe, and the inverted method that specialty cafés use. By the end, you’ll know exactly how to brew a cup that punches well above the $40 price point of the gadget itself.


AeroPress coffee maker. Photo by Elin Melaas on Unsplash.
The AeroPress — small, indestructible, surprisingly capable. Photo by Elin Melaas.

The short answer: AeroPress in 5 steps

  1. Insert a paper filter in the cap and rinse with hot water.
  2. Add 17g of medium-fine ground coffee to the chamber sitting on top of a mug.
  3. Pour in 250g of just-off-boil water (200°F). Stir 5 times.
  4. Wait 1 minute (or 90 seconds for stronger).
  5. Press down slowly over 30 seconds. Stop when you hear a hiss.

That’s the standard recipe. The detail below covers ratios, the inverted method, troubleshooting, and how to make the AeroPress do other tricks.


What you need


The AeroPress ratio

The standard AeroPress ratio is 1:15 (coffee:water) — 17g coffee to 250g water. Most home brewers tweak from there. Stronger and thicker: 1:13. Lighter and tea-like: 1:17.

Cup styleRatioCoffeeWater
Strong / espresso-style1:817g140g
Standard recipe1:1517g250g
Light / tea-like1:1717g290g
AeroPress Go (smaller)1:1513g200g

For more on ratios across every brew method, see our coffee to water ratio guide.


Grind size for AeroPress

Medium-fine — slightly finer than table salt, coarser than espresso. The exact setting depends on your grinder and recipe. The AeroPress is forgiving — even a slightly-off grind still produces a drinkable cup.

Brew methodGrind size
EspressoVery fine
AeroPress (standard)Medium-fine
Pour overMedium-fine
DripMedium
French pressCoarse

If you’re making espresso-style AeroPress (1:8 ratio), grind slightly finer. If you’re making AeroPress cold brew (steep 12 hours in the fridge), grind coarser.


Step-by-step: the standard AeroPress recipe

  1. Boil water and grind 17g of coffee to medium-fine. Set your mug on the scale.
  2. Insert a paper filter into the cap and screw it onto the AeroPress chamber.
  3. Place the AeroPress on your mug with the chamber facing up (numbered side up).
  4. Pour ~30g of just-off-boil water through the filter to rinse it (removes papery taste) and pre-warm the chamber. Empty the mug.
  5. Add the 17g of grounds to the chamber. Place on the mug again.
  6. Start a timer and pour 250g of water over the grounds in a steady stream — aim to finish in ~15 seconds.
  7. Stir 5 times with the included paddle to wet all grounds.
  8. Insert the plunger about 1 cm to create a seal but DON’T press yet. This stops air from rising back through the slurry.
  9. Wait until 1:00 on the timer.
  10. Press down slowly over 30 seconds. You should hear a hiss at the end — that’s the signal to stop.
  11. Dilute if needed. The AeroPress brews concentrated; many people add 50–100g of hot water to taste.
  12. Drink.

The inverted method (advanced)

The “inverted” method flips the AeroPress upside-down during steeping to prevent dripping during the steep — useful for longer extractions (90 seconds or more). It’s the technique used in most World AeroPress Championship recipes.

  1. Insert the plunger about 1 cm into the chamber so it seals (don’t press all the way).
  2. Flip the AeroPress upside-down so it sits on the plunger.
  3. Add 17g of coffee to the now-upturned chamber.
  4. Pour 250g of water and stir.
  5. Steep for 1:30 to 2:00 (longer than standard).
  6. Screw on the filter cap (with rinsed paper filter).
  7. Carefully flip onto your mug and press slowly over 30 seconds.

The inverted method gives you more control over steep time and slightly less drip-through during the steep. AeroPress sells “AeroPress Clear” with markings designed specifically for inverted brewing, but the Original works fine inverted.


Watch: James Hoffmann’s AeroPress technique

Hoffmann’s “Modified Inverted AeroPress” video is the canonical explainer for the technique many specialty baristas use at home. Worth 5 minutes if you want to see the method in action.

Source: James Hoffmann on YouTube.

Troubleshooting AeroPress

ProblemFix
Sour, weak cupGrind finer, steep longer (1:30), or use hotter water
Bitter, harsh cupGrind coarser, steep shorter (45s), lower water to 195°F
Hard to pressGrind too fine — coarsen 2-3 settings
Press finishes too fastGrind too coarse — finer 2-3 settings
Papery tasteRinse filter properly before brewing
Cup tastes flatBeans too old — within 4 weeks of roast date

The AeroPress is the most forgiving brewing method in this category — even your first cup will be drinkable. But for great cups, dial in grind size + steep time over 5-10 attempts.


What else the AeroPress can do

  • Espresso-style concentrate: 1:8 ratio, finer grind, shorter steep — produces a 4oz syrupy shot you can dilute or use in milk drinks. Not real espresso, but close.
  • Cold brew: Steep coarse-ground coffee in cold water for 8-12 hours in the fridge, then press. See our cold brew guide for full method.
  • Iced coffee: Brew at 2:1 strength, then dilute over ice immediately.
  • Travel brewing: The AeroPress Go version is designed for backpacks, camping, hotel rooms.

For the AeroPress vs Moka Pot comparison (both pressure-driven brewers), see our AeroPress vs Moka Pot guide.


The bottom line

The AeroPress is the most underrated brewing method in home coffee. For $40, you get a brewer that’s almost unbreakable, makes 95% of what an espresso machine makes for 5% of the price, and travels better than anything else. The standard recipe is forgiving enough that your first cup will be good; the inverted method gives you control to chase greatness.

For other brewing methods, see our guides on pour over, French press, cold brew, espresso at home, and the soon-to-come Moka pot how-to.


Frequently Asked Questions About the AeroPress

What is the best ratio for AeroPress?

The standard recipe is 1:15 — 17g coffee to 250g water. For a stronger espresso-style cup, 1:8 (17g coffee, 140g water). For lighter tea-like cups, 1:17. Always weigh, never eyeball.

What grind size for AeroPress?

Medium-fine — slightly finer than table salt, coarser than espresso. For espresso-style concentrates use a slightly finer grind. For cold brew with the AeroPress, use coarser. The AeroPress is more forgiving than pour-over on grind size.

Should I use the inverted method?

Worth trying for longer steeps (90+ seconds) where you don’t want water dripping through during the wait. For the standard 1-minute recipe, regular upright orientation works fine. The inverted method is the technique used in most World AeroPress Championship recipes, but it’s not necessary for everyday brewing.

Can the AeroPress make real espresso?

No — it can’t generate the 9 bars of pressure that defines true espresso. But with a 1:8 ratio and a fine grind, you can produce a concentrated 4oz shot that works well as a base for milk drinks (latte, cappuccino, mocha) or americanos. It’s a close approximation but not the real thing. For real espresso, see our best espresso machine guide.

AeroPress Original or AeroPress Go?

AeroPress Original at home, AeroPress Go for travel. The Original brews a slightly larger cup (up to 250g of water comfortably) and is the standard for home use. The Go is smaller, comes with a travel mug that the AeroPress nests inside, and is engineered for backpacks and hotel rooms. Same brewing principles, smaller capacity on the Go.

How long does it take to make an AeroPress?

About 2-3 minutes total. Grinding: 30 seconds. Boiling water: assume kettle’s already done. Brew: 60-90 seconds steep + 30 second press. Cleanup: 10 seconds (eject the spent puck into the trash, rinse). End-to-end from cold start, you’re looking at 3-5 minutes.

AeroPress and moka pot get compared a lot — our AeroPress vs moka pot breakdown covers when to pick each. If you want closer-to-espresso intensity, see how to make espresso at home or our step-by-step French press guide. More in the coffee drinks hub.


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