ABV Calculator
Determine alcohol by volume from original and final gravity readings. Supports multiple measurement scales including SG, Plato, and Brix. Shows apparent and real attenuation percentages alongside calorie estimates per serving.
CalculatorGravity Readings
Results
How to Use
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1
Measure your original gravity
Take a hydrometer or refractometer reading before pitching your yeast. Record this as your original gravity (OG). A typical ale might read 1.050, meaning the wort is 5.0% denser than water due to dissolved sugars.
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2
Measure your final gravity
After fermentation completes and the beer has stabilized — typically 1-2 weeks for most ales — take another gravity reading. This final gravity (FG) reflects the remaining unfermentable sugars after yeast have consumed the fermentable portion.
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3
Calculate and verify your result
The calculator uses the standard formula: ABV = (OG - FG) × 131.25, or the more precise Balling equation for higher-gravity beers. Cross-check against TTB tables if you are brewing commercially, as regulatory reporting requires accurate ABV measurement.
About
Alcohol by volume (ABV) is the fundamental measurement of alcoholic strength in beer, expressing the percentage of pure ethanol in a finished beverage by volume. For brewers, accurately calculating ABV is essential for recipe development, style compliance, responsible consumption communication, and regulatory reporting.
The brewing process converts fermentable sugars into ethanol and carbon dioxide through yeast metabolism. The amount of alcohol produced is directly proportional to the difference between the original gravity (OG) of the wort before fermentation and the final gravity (FG) of the finished beer. Hydrometers measure the density of liquid relative to water, and since dissolved sugars increase density while ethanol decreases it, the gravity drop during fermentation provides a reliable proxy for alcohol content.
Modern brewing science offers several equations of varying accuracy, from the simplified standard homebrewing formula to the precise Balling equation used in professional breweries. The choice of formula matters most at the extremes — for session beers under 5% ABV, any standard formula yields adequate results, while barleywines and imperial stouts above 10% ABV benefit from more sophisticated calculations. Understanding the principles behind ABV measurement helps brewers produce more consistent results and communicate accurately about their creations.