Brewhouse Efficiency Calculator: Using FG As Is Explained


Brewhouse Efficiency Calculator

An essential tool for all-grain brewers to measure and optimize the sugar extraction from their grain bill. This calculator helps you understand your system’s performance for consistent brewing.



The total volume of cooled wort transferred to your fermenter.
Please enter a valid volume.


The specific gravity of the wort before pitching yeast.
Please enter a valid gravity reading (e.g., 1.055).


The combined weight of all grains and fermentables in your mash.
Please enter a valid weight.


Average Points per Pound per Gallon (PPG) of your grain bill. See table below for common values.
Please enter a valid potential.


Potential vs. Actual Extraction

Potential Actual

This chart visualizes the total gravity points you collected versus the maximum potential points from your grain bill.

What is Brewhouse Efficiency?

Brewhouse efficiency is one of the most important metrics for an all-grain brewer. In simple terms, it measures how effectively you extract sugars from your malted grains and get them into your fermenter. It’s expressed as a percentage that compares the actual amount of sugar you collected in your wort against the theoretical maximum amount of sugar available in your grain bill.

A higher efficiency means you need less grain to reach your target gravity, saving money and resources. More importantly, understanding and tracking your brewhouse efficiency allows for predictable, repeatable brewing, which is the key to consistency. It accounts for all losses in the process, from mashing and lautering to wort left behind in the kettle (trub).

Original Gravity (OG) vs. Final Gravity (FG)

A crucial point of clarification for this topic: **Brewhouse efficiency is ALWAYS calculated using Original Gravity (OG)**, which is the sugar density of your wort *before* fermentation begins. The user query “calculating brewhouse efficiency using fg as is” introduces a common point of confusion. Final Gravity (FG) is the measurement taken *after* fermentation is complete. FG is used to calculate alcohol by volume (ABV) and yeast attenuation, not to determine the efficiency of your sugar extraction process. This calculator correctly uses OG for all calculations.

The Brewhouse Efficiency Formula and Explanation

The calculation for brewhouse efficiency involves a few key steps that compare the potential of your ingredients to the reality of your results.

  1. Calculate Gravity Points Collected: This is the total amount of sugar that made it into your fermenter.

    (Original Gravity - 1) * 1000 * Final Wort Volume
  2. Calculate Maximum Potential Points: This is the theoretical maximum amount of sugar available in your grain bill.

    Total Grain Weight * Average Grain Potential (PPG)
  3. Determine Brewhouse Efficiency: The final percentage is a ratio of the collected points to the potential points.

    (Gravity Points Collected / Maximum Potential Points) * 100

Variables Table

Description of Variables Used in the Calculation
Variable Meaning Unit Typical Range
Wort Volume The final volume of wort in the fermenter. Gallons or Liters 1 – 20 (Homebrew scale)
Original Gravity (OG) The density of the wort before fermentation. Specific Gravity (e.g., 1.050) 1.030 – 1.120
Grain Weight The total weight of all malted grains used. Pounds (lbs) or Kilograms (kg) 5 – 30 (Homebrew scale)
Grain Potential (PPG) Points per Pound per Gallon; the max sugar yield. Points 25 – 42

Common Grain Potentials (PPG)
Grain Type Typical Potential (PPG)
American 2-Row Pale Malt 37
Maris Otter Pale Malt 38
Pilsner Malt 37
Munich Malt 35
Crystal/Caramel Malt (40L) 34
Flaked Oats 33
Roasted Barley 25

Practical Examples

Example 1: A Standard American IPA

  • Inputs:
    • Final Wort Volume: 5.5 Gallons
    • Original Gravity Measured: 1.060
    • Total Grain Weight: 12 lbs
    • Average Grain Potential: 36 PPG
  • Calculation:
    • Gravity Points Collected: (1.060 – 1) * 1000 * 5.5 = 330
    • Maximum Potential Points: 12 lbs * 36 PPG = 432
    • Brewhouse Efficiency: (330 / 432) * 100 = 76.4%

Example 2: A Metric Oatmeal Stout

  • Inputs:
    • Final Wort Volume: 20 Liters
    • Original Gravity Measured: 1.052
    • Total Grain Weight: 5 kg
    • Average Grain Potential: 35 PPG
  • Calculation (after conversion to US units):
    • Wort Volume: 20 L * 0.264172 = 5.28 Gallons
    • Grain Weight: 5 kg * 2.20462 = 11.02 lbs
    • Gravity Points Collected: (1.052 – 1) * 1000 * 5.28 = 274.56
    • Maximum Potential Points: 11.02 lbs * 35 PPG = 385.7
    • Brewhouse Efficiency: (274.56 / 385.7) * 100 = 71.2%

How to Use This Brewhouse Efficiency Calculator

  1. Select Your Unit System: Choose between US (Gallons, lbs) and Metric (Liters, kg) to match your measurements. The labels will update automatically.
  2. Enter Final Wort Volume: Input the volume of wort you successfully transferred into your fermenter, after cooling and separating from trub.
  3. Enter Original Gravity: Use a hydrometer or refractometer to get an accurate reading of your cooled wort’s gravity before you pitch the yeast.
  4. Enter Total Grain Weight: Sum the weight of all fermentable grains in your recipe.
  5. Enter Average Grain Potential: Calculate the weighted average potential of your grain bill, or use a good estimate (36 is a safe bet for most pale ale recipes). Refer to our mash efficiency calculator for more detailed calculations.
  6. Click “Calculate”: The calculator will instantly display your brewhouse efficiency, along with the intermediate values used in the calculation.

Key Factors That Affect Brewhouse Efficiency

Achieving consistent brewhouse efficiency requires controlling many variables throughout your brew day. Here are the six most critical factors:

1. Grain Crush Quality
The crush is paramount. Too coarse, and you won’t expose the starches for conversion. Too fine, and you risk a stuck sparge, where water can’t flow through the grain bed. Finding the right balance for your system is key.
2. Mash pH
The pH of your mash affects the enzymatic activity that converts starches into fermentable sugars. The ideal range is typically 5.2-5.6. Water chemistry adjustments are often needed to hit this target.
3. Mash Temperature and Time
Different enzymes are active at different temperatures. A consistent mash temperature within the target range for your desired beer style ensures proper starch conversion. A full 60-minute mash is standard to ensure conversion is complete.
4. Sparge Technique
How you rinse the sugars from the grain bed (lautering) significantly impacts efficiency. A slow, even sparge prevents channeling and ensures you rinse the entire grain bed effectively.
5. Equipment Losses
Every system has “deadspace”—unrecoverable wort left in the mash tun, lines, or kettle. Accurately measuring these losses and accounting for them is crucial for predicting efficiency.
6. Boil-off Rate
While not a direct factor in sugar extraction, your boil-off rate concentrates the wort. If you boil off more or less than planned, your final volume will change, directly affecting the efficiency calculation. Our strike water calculator can help you plan your volumes.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

1. What is a “good” brewhouse efficiency?

Most homebrew systems operate in the 65-80% range. Commercial breweries can reach into the 90s. What’s most important isn’t hitting a specific high number, but achieving a *consistent* number that you can plan your recipes around.

2. What is the difference between Mash Efficiency and Brewhouse Efficiency?

Mash efficiency only measures sugar conversion and extraction into the liquid in the mash tun. Brewhouse efficiency is the overall number that also accounts for all subsequent losses, like wort left in the mash tun, in the kettle (trub), and in transfer hoses. Brewhouse efficiency is the more practical number for recipe formulation.

3. Why isn’t my efficiency 100%?

100% efficiency is a theoretical maximum that is practically impossible to achieve. There will always be uncoverted starches, unrinsable sugars left in the grain husks, and physical wort losses in your equipment.

4. How do I calculate the average grain potential for my recipe?

To be precise, you need to do a weighted average. For each grain, multiply its weight by its PPG rating. Sum these values, then divide by the total grain weight. For a quick estimate, using the PPG of your base malt is often close enough.

5. Why did my efficiency drop on a high-gravity beer?

As the grain bill gets larger, the grain bed becomes thicker and more compacted. This can lead to less efficient rinsing (sparging) and more wort absorption by the grain, both of which lower your overall brewhouse efficiency.

6. Does the unit system (US/Metric) change the actual efficiency?

No. The underlying efficiency of your process is the same. The calculator converts all metric inputs into their US equivalents to use the standard PPG formula, so the final percentage remains accurate regardless of your input units.

7. Can I use this calculator for extract brewing?

No, this calculator is specifically for all-grain brewing. Extract brewing has a 100% “efficiency” in the sense that all the sugars from the extract are dissolved directly into the water. If you want to calculate your gravity from extract, you can use our ABV calculator.

8. Where do I find the potential PPG for my malt?

The malt manufacturer’s website or datasheet is the most accurate source. They often list it as “Extract, Fine Grind, Dry Basis (FGDB)” or similar. Many online brewing resources also have charts of common malt potentials.

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