Hop Substitution Finder
Find suitable replacements for any hop variety based on alpha acid range, oil composition, and flavor descriptors. Input the hop you need to replace and see ranked alternatives with similarity scores. Useful when a variety is out of stock or when adapting recipes for local ingredients.
CalculatorSelect a Hop
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How to Use
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1
Identify the original hop variety
Enter the hop variety called for in your original recipe. The tool references a database of hop alpha acid ranges, flavor descriptors, and origin information for hundreds of varieties. Knowing whether your hop is primarily a bittering addition, flavor addition, or aroma addition helps prioritize the most important characteristics to match.
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2
Review substitution recommendations
The tool provides ranked alternatives based on similarity in alpha acid range, flavor family (resinous, citrus, floral, earthy, spicy), and breeding lineage. Hops from the same breeding program or geographic origin tend to be the most interchangeable. Review the provided descriptor comparison to confirm the substitute shares the key characteristics relevant to your recipe.
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3
Adjust quantities for alpha acid differences
If the substitute has a different alpha acid percentage, adjust the weight proportionally to maintain the same IBU contribution. For flavor and aroma hops where IBU contribution is minimal, maintain the same weight to preserve the overall impression rather than adjusting by alpha acid percentage, which becomes less relevant at the end of the boil and in dry hopping.
About
Hops are the most diverse flavor ingredient available to brewers, with hundreds of commercially available varieties ranging from traditional European noble hops to aggressively modern American and Southern Hemisphere varieties engineered for maximum aroma impact. Understanding the relationships between hop varieties and the principles of substitution gives brewers the flexibility to adapt recipes to available ingredients without compromising quality.
The hop plant (Humulus lupulus) produces cone-shaped flowers containing lupulin glands filled with alpha acids, beta acids, and essential oils. Alpha acids isomerize during the boil to provide bitterness, while the aromatic oil fraction — primarily myrcene, linalool, geraniol, farnesene, and hundreds of additional minor compounds — contribute the vast spectrum of flavors and aromas associated with different hop varieties. Breeding programs around the world continuously develop new varieties by crossing existing cultivars to combine desirable characteristics, which is why many modern hops have recognizable similarities to their parent varieties.
The practical skill of hop substitution is essential for homebrew recipe adaptation and creativity. No single substitution database can perfectly predict sensory outcomes because hop character varies by harvest year, growing region, and storage conditions. The best approach combines reference to established substitution guides with sensory evaluation of the candidate hops before brew day — smelling, tasting, and comparing dry hop samples allows brewers to make informed substitution decisions based on direct experience rather than database lookups alone.