BU:GU Ratio Analyzer

Analyze the bitterness-to-gravity ratio of your recipe to predict perceived balance. Input IBU and OG to see where your beer falls on the scale from malt-forward (< 0.5) to hop-forward (> 1.0). Compare against BJCP style targets with visual placement on the balance spectrum.

Calculator
Presets:

Input Values

BU:GU Ratio

0.00
BU:GU
--
Balance
0
Gravity Units
Malt-forward Balanced Hop-forward

Style Reference

How to Use

  1. 1
    Calculate your IBUs

    Use the IBU calculator to determine the total bitterness of your recipe in International Bitterness Units. Enter all hop additions with their weight, alpha acid percentage, and boil time to obtain an accurate IBU estimate before calculating the BU:GU ratio.

  2. 2
    Determine your gravity units

    Take the last two digits of your original gravity as your gravity units. For example, an OG of 1.052 yields 52 gravity units. This simple extraction converts the Plato or specific gravity scale into a comparable unit that, when divided into IBUs, produces the BU:GU ratio.

  3. 3
    Interpret your balance ratio

    Divide IBUs by gravity units to calculate the ratio. Values below 0.5 indicate malt-forward sweetness dominant character, 0.5-0.7 is balanced, 0.7-1.0 leans toward hoppy but still balanced, and values above 1.0 indicate intensely bitter, hop-dominant character. Cross-reference with BJCP style guidelines for your target style's expected range.

About

The Bitterness-to-Gravity Units ratio is a practical recipe design shorthand that captures the balance between a beer's most prominent sensory dimensions in a single number. Developed by homebrewing writers including Randy Mosher in the 1990s, the BU:GU ratio gives brewers a quick method to evaluate whether their recipe reflects the intended style character before committing ingredients and brew time.

The underlying principle is straightforward: original gravity is a proxy for the malt sweetness potential of a beer, while IBUs represent its bitterness contribution from hops. Dividing one by the other yields a ratio that expresses their relative magnitudes. At ratio values below 0.5, the recipe is designed to emphasize malt character and sweetness. Values near 1.0 indicate equal emphasis, while values above 1.0 signal hop-dominant design. This framework encodes centuries of brewing intuition about style balance into a simple calculation accessible to any brewer with a gravity reading and an IBU estimate.

While the BU:GU ratio is a useful educational and diagnostic tool, experienced brewers treat it as one parameter among many rather than a definitive arbiter of recipe quality. Fermentation character, water chemistry, carbonation, and serving temperature all influence the sensory balance of a finished beer in ways the ratio cannot capture. The best way to develop ratio intuition is to calculate the BU:GU for beers you know and enjoy — tracking patterns across styles builds a personal reference framework that makes the number more meaningful than any table can convey.

FAQ

What does the BU:GU ratio actually measure?
The Bitterness-to-Gravity Units ratio (BU:GU or BUGU) is a simple dimensionless number that expresses the balance between a beer's bitterness contribution from hops and its sweetness potential from malt sugars. It does not measure fermentation, final gravity, or actual perceived balance — it is a recipe formulation tool that compares two input variables. The ratio becomes more meaningful when interpreted alongside other recipe parameters including expected attenuation, mash temperature, and the style's characteristic flavor profile. It is most useful as a quick diagnostic when evaluating whether a recipe is likely to hit the intended bitterness balance before brewing.
What BU:GU ratio is typical for different beer styles?
Style ranges vary considerably. Session beers and American light lagers typically fall below 0.4. English-style milds and sweet stouts often land in the 0.3-0.5 range to emphasize malt sweetness. Balanced American ales and German lagers target 0.5-0.7. American IPAs traditionally fall in the 0.8-1.1 range, while West Coast Double IPAs may exceed 1.2. Extreme hop-forward styles like Triple IPAs can reach ratios well above 1.5. Note that actual perceived bitterness is also heavily influenced by finishing gravity, carbonation level, and serving temperature, all of which the ratio does not capture.
How does the BU:GU ratio relate to perceived bitterness?
The BU:GU ratio is a useful approximation but not a perfect predictor of perceived bitterness for two main reasons. First, residual sweetness from unfermented sugars (high finishing gravity) masks bitterness — the same IBU number feels less bitter in a beer finishing at 1.020 compared to 1.008. Second, mineral balance in the brewing water, particularly the sulfate-to-chloride ratio, significantly affects bitterness perception. Sulfate-heavy water amplifies bitterness while chloride-rich water softens it. Experienced brewers use the BU:GU ratio as a starting point and adjust based on sensory evaluation of finished test batches rather than relying on it as a definitive balance predictor.
Can I use the BU:GU ratio for recipe cloning?
The BU:GU ratio is a helpful data point when analyzing commercial beers for cloning purposes, but it should be combined with other analytical information. Many commercial breweries publish IBU and ABV data from which you can estimate OG and calculate an approximate BU:GU ratio. Comparing this against your target recipe helps confirm that your hop additions are in the right range. However, the ratio cannot tell you about hop variety selection, addition timing, dry hopping, or the specific interplay of malt and hop flavors that make a particular beer distinctive. Treat it as one of several diagnostic tools in your recipe design process.
Does dry hopping affect the BU:GU ratio?
Dry hopping adds minimal IBUs because isomerization of alpha acids requires boiling temperatures. However, dry hopping significantly affects perceived bitterness and overall hop character through aroma and flavor oil additions. A heavily dry-hopped IPA may taste more intensely hoppy and bitter than its IBU number suggests, even though the calculated BU:GU ratio based on boil additions alone would not capture this. For hazy and New England-style IPAs, which typically use lower boil IBU additions but extensive dry hopping, the BU:GU ratio calculated from boil hops alone can be misleading as a predictor of the beer's overall hop impression.