Water Chemistry Calculator

Build your brewing water profile from scratch or adjust existing water. Input mineral concentrations (Ca, Mg, Na, SO4, Cl, HCO3) and target a style-specific profile like Burton, Pilsen, or Dublin. Calculate salt additions for gypsum, calcium chloride, and Epsom salt.

Calculator
Profiles:

Your Water (ppm)

Target Profile (ppm)

Salt Additions

Salt Grams Tsp
SO4:Cl =

How to Use

  1. 1
    Test or profile your source water

    Obtain your water report from your municipal water utility or use a home water testing kit. Record calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), sodium (Na), chloride (Cl), sulfate (SO4), and bicarbonate (HCO3) concentrations in parts per million (ppm). These six ions are the primary variables in brewing water chemistry.

  2. 2
    Select your target water profile

    Choose a target profile based on your beer style. Classic profiles like Burton-on-Trent (high sulfate) suit hop-forward pale ales, while Dublin-style water (high carbonate) historically produced dry Irish stouts. For most modern homebrewing, targeting a balanced profile with 50-150 ppm calcium and appropriate sulfate-to-chloride ratio yields excellent results across styles.

  3. 3
    Calculate mineral additions

    Enter your batch volume and the calculator will determine how much of each mineral salt to add to hit your targets. Common additions include gypsum (calcium sulfate), calcium chloride, Epsom salt (magnesium sulfate), baking soda (sodium bicarbonate), and chalk (calcium carbonate). Make additions to your strike water before mashing for best dissolution.

About

Water is the largest ingredient in any batch of beer, comprising 90-95% of finished product by volume, yet it is often the most overlooked variable in homebrewing. Understanding and controlling water chemistry allows brewers to replicate classic styles, troubleshoot quality issues, and consistently produce excellent beer regardless of geographic location.

The classic beer styles of history were shaped largely by the water available in their regions of origin. The soft, low-mineral water of Bohemia enables the delicate hop character of Bohemian Pilsner. The calcium-rich, sulfate-high waters of Burton-on-Trent drove the development of hop-forward English pale ales and IPAs. The alkaline, carbonate-heavy waters of Dublin and Munich historically suited the production of dark, roasted-malt beers because the alkalinity balanced the natural acidity of dark malts. Modern homebrewers can replicate any of these profiles starting from treated tap water or reverse osmosis water.

The four most impactful water chemistry variables for flavor are the sulfate-to-chloride ratio (affecting hop or malt emphasis), total calcium (yeast health and enzyme function), bicarbonate alkalinity (mash pH buffering), and sodium (background flavor and fullness). Even modest adjustments to these parameters can dramatically improve the character and consistency of finished beer.

FAQ

How does water chemistry affect beer flavor?
Water chemistry influences beer flavor through multiple pathways. Calcium is essential for yeast health and enzyme function and concentrations below 50 ppm can cause fermentation problems. Sulfate accentuates hop bitterness and dryness — the historically hop-forward beers of Burton-on-Trent result from naturally high sulfate water. Chloride enhances malt sweetness and body, which is why English milds and German lagers often use chloride-rich water profiles. Bicarbonate raises mash pH, which can cause harsh, astringent flavors from dark malts unless counterbalanced. The balance between sulfate and chloride (the sulfate:chloride ratio) is one of the most powerful variables available to brewers for flavor shaping.
What is mash pH and why does it matter?
Mash pH refers to the acidity of the mixture of water and crushed grain during the saccharification rest. The optimal mash pH for most beer styles falls between 5.2 and 5.4, a range where amylase enzymes extract maximum fermentable sugars most efficiently. Mash pH outside this range results in reduced efficiency, hazy beer, poor head retention, and off-flavors. Light-colored beers with mostly pale malt typically need acid additions (lactic acid or phosphoric acid) to bring pH into range, while dark beers with roasted malts can naturally acidify the mash. Mineral additions, particularly calcium, also lower mash pH.
What is residual alkalinity and how do I correct it?
Residual alkalinity (RA) measures the net buffering effect of bicarbonate alkalinity after accounting for the pH-lowering effect of calcium and magnesium. High RA water resists mash pH reduction and is difficult to use for light, pale beers without treatment. To reduce RA, brewers can boil the water to precipitate carbonates, treat it with food-grade lactic acid, use acid malt in the grain bill, or dilute with reverse osmosis or distilled water. Negative RA values indicate water that will naturally drive the mash toward the acidic range, which is ideal for pale lagers and pilsners.
Do I need to add minerals if my source water is already good?
Not necessarily. Many municipal water supplies produce excellent beer with no mineral additions, particularly in regions with naturally soft water. The primary reasons to adjust water are to match historical style profiles, correct specific deficiencies (such as very low calcium), shift the sulfate-to-chloride ratio toward your flavor goals, or reduce excessive alkalinity that would elevate mash pH. Many experienced homebrewers find that minor adjustments — adding 50-100 ppm calcium via gypsum or calcium chloride — provide the most benefit, while obsessive pursuit of exact historical profiles often produces diminishing returns.
Can I use bottled water for brewing?
Bottled water can be an excellent brewing water source, particularly spring water or reverse osmosis (RO) water. RO water is essentially blank — it contains almost no minerals — making it ideal as a base to which you add precisely measured mineral additions to build your desired profile. Spring waters vary widely in mineral content, so checking the label or manufacturer's water report before brewing is important. Avoid distilled water as your only source, as it lacks the minerals yeast need for health, though it can be blended with harder water to reduce alkalinity.