Style Comparison Tool
Compare any two BJCP beer styles side by side. View differences in OG, FG, IBU, SRM, and ABV ranges displayed as overlapping bar charts. See sensory profile differences for aroma, flavor, mouthfeel, and appearance at a glance.
CalculatorSelect Two Styles
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How to Use
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1
Select two beer styles to compare
Choose any two BJCP-recognized styles from the dropdown menus. You can compare within a family (American IPA vs. American Double IPA), across families (German Pilsner vs. American Light Lager), or between historical and modern expressions of the same base style to understand evolution over time.
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2
Review the side-by-side specifications
The comparison displays OG range, FG range, IBU range, SRM range, ABV range, and characteristic descriptors for each style. These ranges represent BJCP guidelines as codified in the most current edition of the BJCP Style Guidelines, which are updated periodically to reflect industry changes.
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Apply insights to recipe design
Use the specification differences to understand what distinguishes your target styles. If designing a recipe, ensure your parameters fall within the guidelines for your chosen style. Competition brewers should reference the current BJCP guidelines directly for any style they intend to enter, as this tool provides educational summaries rather than competition-grade specifications.
About
Beer style guidelines are the organizing framework through which the brewing community communicates, evaluates, and preserves the world's diverse brewing traditions. From the crisp, mineral Bohemian Pilsner to the complex, dark Belgian Quadrupel, each recognized style represents a convergence of regional ingredients, historical brewing methods, cultural preferences, and generational refinement.
The Beer Judge Certification Program (BJCP) Style Guidelines represent the most comprehensive publicly available codification of beer style parameters used in homebrewing competitions throughout North America and beyond. First published in 1985, the guidelines have been revised multiple times to incorporate new styles, retire outdated ones, and update descriptions as palates and brewing practices evolve. The 2021 edition reflects contemporary craft brewing and homebrewing realities, including the recognition of styles that barely existed a decade ago.
For homebrewers, style guidelines serve multiple practical functions. They provide recipe targets (OG, IBU, SRM, ABV ranges) that help brewers calibrate their process toward a defined outcome. They offer descriptive language for evaluating and communicating beer quality. And they connect individual beers to the broader historical and cultural context from which they emerged — understanding that the dry, bitter character of an Irish Extra Stout reflects centuries of Guinness brewing tradition adds meaning and intention to every brew day.