The single most important variable in home coffee is the coffee-to-water ratio. Get the grind perfect, the water temperature right, the brew time on the second — but pour too much or too little water for your dose, and the cup will taste weak, watery, sour, or bitter. The ratio sits underneath every brewing method and is the easiest variable to dial in once you understand what’s actually happening.
This guide is your reference for every common ratio — pour over, French press, drip, AeroPress, cold brew, espresso. We’ll cover the math, why ratios are written by weight (not volume), how to scale for any batch size, and what to adjust when a cup tastes off.
The short answer: coffee to water ratios by brew method
Here is the master table — every common ratio you’ll need at home, written as coffee:water by weight.
| Brew method | Ratio (coffee:water) | Example (coffee in g) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Espresso | 1:2 | 18g → 36g shot | By output weight, not input water |
| AeroPress | 1:14 to 1:16 | 15g → 210–240g | Varies by recipe and inversion |
| Pour over (V60, Kalita) | 1:16 | 20g → 320g | SCA Golden Cup standard |
| Chemex | 1:15 to 1:17 | 30g → 450g | Slightly stronger to compensate for thick filter |
| Drip coffee maker | 1:16 to 1:18 | 60g → 1L (4 mugs) | Most machines auto-set ratio |
| French press | 1:15 | 60g → 900g | Slightly stronger because no paper filter |
| Moka pot | ~1:7 | 20g → ~140g | Filled by water reservoir capacity |
| Cold brew concentrate | 1:4 | 100g → 400g | Dilute 1:1 with water before drinking |
| Cold brew ready-to-drink | 1:8 | 100g → 800g | Sip as-is over ice |
If you only memorise one ratio, memorise 1:16 for pour over and drip, 1:15 for French press, and 1:4 for cold brew concentrate. Those three cover 90% of home brewing.

Why ratios are written by weight, not volume
The single biggest mistake home brewers make is measuring coffee by volume (tablespoons, scoops) instead of weight (grams). Coffee beans vary in density by roast level, origin, and grind size. A “tablespoon of coffee” is anywhere from 4 to 8 grams depending on the bean.
| Measurement | Typical weight in grams | Why it varies |
|---|---|---|
| 1 tbsp whole light roast beans | ~5g | Light roasts are denser per bean but larger |
| 1 tbsp whole dark roast beans | ~4.5g | Dark roasts puff up — less dense, less per spoon |
| 1 tbsp medium ground coffee | ~5–6g | Drip grind |
| 1 tbsp fine ground coffee | ~6–7g | Packs tighter |
| 1 tbsp coarse ground coffee | ~5g | French press / cold brew grind |
| 1 standard coffee scoop | ~10–12g | Equals about 2 tbsp |
A 2g swing per tablespoon means a “4 tablespoon pot of coffee” could be anywhere from 16g to 28g — a 75% range. Your brew quality cannot survive that kind of variation. A $10 digital scale fixes the problem completely. For more on counting beans accurately, see our how many coffee beans per cup guide.
Water is easier — 1ml of water weighs almost exactly 1g, so you can use a measuring jug for water and a scale for coffee. Or put the brewer directly on the scale and pour by weight in real time.
Pour over ratio: 1:16 is the SCA standard
For pour over coffee — V60, Kalita Wave, Origami — use a 1:16 coffee-to-water ratio. That’s the Specialty Coffee Association’s Golden Cup ratio, designed to produce a balanced cup that highlights the bean’s flavour notes without leaning sour (under-extracted) or bitter (over-extracted).
- 1 standard mug (240ml): 15g coffee : 240g water
- 1 large mug (320ml): 20g coffee : 320g water
- 2 cups (500ml): 31g coffee : 500g water
If the cup tastes weak, move to 1:15 (more coffee per gram of water). If it tastes harsh or bitter, move to 1:17. The 1:16 starting point gives you margin for adjustment in both directions. Our full how to make pour over coffee guide walks through the technique end to end.
Chemex uses slightly more coffee — 1:15 to 1:16 — because the thicker bonded paper filter slows extraction and produces a cleaner, lighter cup that benefits from a stronger dose.
French press ratio: 1:15 for a fuller body
For French press, use 1:15. Slightly more coffee than pour over because French press doesn’t use a paper filter — the metal mesh allows oils and fines through, so a slightly stronger dose balances out the heavier mouthfeel.
| French press size | Water (g) | Coffee (g) |
|---|---|---|
| 3-cup (350ml) | 350 | 23 |
| 4-cup (500ml) | 500 | 33 |
| 8-cup (1L) | 1000 | 67 |
| 12-cup (1.5L) | 1500 | 100 |
“Cup” on French press sizing is a 4 oz measure, not a US 8 oz cup — confusing but standard. An “8-cup” French press makes 8 × 4 oz = 32 oz of coffee. See our how to make French press coffee guide for the full method.
Drip coffee maker ratio: 1:16 to 1:18
Most automatic drip coffee makers are engineered around a 1:17 ratio by default. The “10-cup” line in your machine assumes 4 oz cups (40 oz total) and approximately 60g of medium-ground coffee. If your drip coffee always tastes weak, the fix is almost always: more coffee, same water level.
- 4 mugs (1L of water): 60g coffee
- 8 mugs (2L of water): 120g coffee
- 12 mugs (3L of water): 180g coffee
Drip machines are forgiving of small grind variations but unforgiving of weak doses. If you’ve ever tasted “diner coffee” — thin, watery, slightly bitter — that’s a drip machine running at 1:20 or weaker. Don’t trust the scoop included with the machine; weigh.

Cold brew ratio: 1:4 concentrate or 1:8 ready-to-drink
Cold brew has two valid ratios depending on what you’re making. 1:4 makes concentrate (intended to be diluted before drinking). 1:8 makes ready-to-drink (sip as-is over ice). Most home brewers prefer the concentrate route because it’s more flexible and keeps better in the fridge.
| Style | Coffee : Water | Example | How to drink |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concentrate | 1:4 | 100g coffee : 400g water | Dilute 1:1 with water/milk over ice |
| Ready-to-drink | 1:8 | 100g coffee : 800g water | Pour over ice as-is |
The unusually high coffee-to-water ratio for cold brew exists because cold water extracts much less efficiently than hot water — you need more coffee per gram of water to compensate. Even the 1:8 “ready-to-drink” cold brew has roughly twice the coffee per cup of a hot pour over (1:16). The full method is in our how to make cold brew coffee guide.
Espresso ratio: 1:2 by output, not input
Espresso is different from every other ratio on this list because it’s measured by output, not input water. A standard espresso is 18g of ground coffee yielding 36g of liquid espresso in the cup — a 1:2 brew ratio.
- Ristretto: 1:1 to 1:1.5 — shorter, more intense
- Normale (standard espresso): 1:2 — the default at most cafés
- Lungo: 1:3 to 1:4 — longer, milder, more caffeine
The input water for an espresso shot is usually much more than 36g — water flows through the puck at high pressure and a lot is absorbed by the grounds. Espresso machines measure the shot by weight or volume of liquid in the cup, which is the right way to think about it. For more on espresso, see caffeine in a shot of espresso.
How to dial in your ratio: troubleshooting
Once you’ve picked the right starting ratio for your brew method, adjust based on how the cup tastes — not how the recipe reads.
| Cup tastes | Likely cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Weak, thin, watery | Too much water for the coffee dose | Move from 1:17 to 1:16, or 1:16 to 1:15 |
| Bitter, harsh, dry | Too much coffee, or over-extracted | Move from 1:14 to 1:15, or check grind size |
| Sour, lemony, hollow | Under-extracted — usually grind, not ratio | Grind finer, raise water temp, then retest ratio |
| Boring, flat, characterless | Bean freshness or roast level | Switch beans before adjusting ratio |
| Strong but balanced — like espresso | You’ve over-coffee’d for the method | Move toward 1:16 from 1:13–1:14 |
Adjust by 1g at a time and retest with the same grind and beans. If you change two variables at once, you won’t know which fixed (or broke) the cup. For dialling in beans by freshness, see how to tell if coffee beans are fresh.
Coffee-to-water ratio for different cup sizes
Here’s the math for the most common cup sizes at home, all assuming a 1:16 ratio (the safest starting point for most non-espresso methods):
| Cup size | Water volume | Coffee needed (1:16) | Coffee in tbsp (approx) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Espresso (1 oz) | 30g | 18g (espresso uses 1:2) | ~3 tbsp |
| Small cup (6 oz / 180ml) | 180g | 11g | ~2 tbsp |
| Mug (8 oz / 240ml) | 240g | 15g | ~3 tbsp |
| Large mug (12 oz / 360ml) | 360g | 22g | ~4 tbsp |
| Travel mug (16 oz / 480ml) | 480g | 30g | ~5 tbsp |
| French press 4-cup (17 oz / 500ml) | 500g | 33g (1:15) | ~6 tbsp |
| Carafe (32 oz / 1L) | 1000g | 62g | ~10 tbsp |
Don’t trust the tablespoon estimates for actual brewing — they’re for ballpark only. Use the gram column with a scale. The grind density, roast level, and how packed your spoon is will all shift the tablespoon math by 20–40%.
The Golden Cup Standard: where 1:16 came from
The Specialty Coffee Association’s “Golden Cup” standard is the source of most ratio recommendations you’ll see across coffee resources. It’s an extraction yield target — between 18% and 22% of the coffee bean’s mass should end up dissolved in the final cup — paired with a total dissolved solids target of 1.15% to 1.35% in the brew.
What that means in practical terms: at a 1:16 ratio, with the right grind size and water temperature, hot brewing methods land in this target zone for most coffees. Outside that range, the cup is either under-extracted (under 18%, tastes sour) or over-extracted (over 22%, tastes bitter). The ratio is the easiest variable to control because it doesn’t depend on your gear or technique — you can hit it exactly with a scale.
If you want a deeper dive into what’s happening during extraction, the SCA’s research portal publishes the underlying coffee science. For most home brewers, knowing the target ratios is enough.
Do you need a scale to brew good coffee?
Honestly, yes. A $10–$15 digital kitchen scale is the single highest-impact upgrade you can make to your home brewing setup — bigger improvement than upgrading your beans, your brewer, or your kettle.
Without a scale, you’re guessing on the most important variable. With a scale, every cup is repeatable — you know exactly what you used last time, so when something tastes good (or bad), you can change one variable and retest. Brewing without measurement is like baking without measurement: occasionally great, mostly inconsistent.
What to look for: 0.1g resolution, weighs up to 2kg, has a tare button. Any cheap kitchen scale on Amazon meets these specs. Specialty coffee scales (Acaia, Hario) add timers and Bluetooth, but they’re overkill for most home brewers.
The bottom line
The coffee-to-water ratio is the foundation of every brewed cup. Memorise 1:16 for pour over and drip, 1:15 for French press, 1:4 for cold brew concentrate, 1:2 for espresso — and you’ll cover almost every home brewing situation. Weigh everything in grams; never trust tablespoons or scoops; adjust by 1g at a time when something tastes off.
If your coffee already tastes good, the ratio probably isn’t the problem. If it’s weak or bitter and you can’t figure out why, the ratio is the first place to look. A $10 scale solves the problem for the rest of your coffee-drinking life.
Frequently Asked Questions About the Coffee to Water Ratio
For most brewing methods, use 1:16 by weight — 1 gram of coffee for every 16 grams of water. This is the SCA Golden Cup standard and works for pour over, drip, and AeroPress. For French press use 1:15 (slightly stronger because no paper filter). For cold brew concentrate use 1:4. For espresso use 1:2 measured by output weight.
Roughly 2 tablespoons of ground coffee per 6 oz cup of water — but tablespoons are unreliable. Coffee density varies by roast and grind size, so a single tablespoon weighs anywhere from 4 to 7 grams. The same recipe in tablespoons can produce a 50% strength swing between two batches. A digital scale solves the problem and costs around $10.
Almost always because the coffee-to-water ratio is too dilute. Most underwhelming drip coffee runs at 1:18 or weaker, when it should be 1:16. Add 10–15% more coffee to the same water amount and retest. If it’s still weak, check the grind (too coarse will under-extract) and the water temperature (too cool will under-extract too). But ratio is usually the issue.
Because cold water extracts much less efficiently than hot water. Hot water at 200°F pulls flavour compounds out of coffee in 4 minutes; cold water takes 12–24 hours to do half as much extraction. The 1:4 concentrate ratio compensates by using much more coffee. Once you dilute concentrate 1:1 with water before drinking, the effective ratio in the cup is around 1:8 — still stronger than a 1:16 hot brew, which is why cold brew has more caffeine per cup.
Espresso ratio is measured by output weight (how much liquid ends up in the cup) rather than input water (how much water entered the machine). This is because a lot of water is absorbed by the coffee puck during the 25-second extraction — input water doesn’t tell you what’s in the cup. A standard ‘normale’ espresso is 18g of grounds yielding 36g of liquid espresso — a 1:2 ratio. Ristretto is 1:1, lungo is 1:3 to 1:4.
For consistently good coffee, yes. A scale is the highest-impact upgrade you can make — bigger improvement than better beans, a better brewer, or a better kettle. Without it, your ratio swings 20–40% between batches because coffee density varies by bean and grind. A $10 digital kitchen scale fixes this completely and lets every cup be repeatable.
Explore more in our coffee drinks hub.

Hey there! I’m Austin and I love coffee. In fact, I drink about 5 americanos a day. I started BrewingCoffees because I wanted to share my love of coffee with the world. Before starting BrewingCoffees, I worked as a Barista for 7 years.

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