Dilution and Boil Off
Gravity Calculator
The Brewer's GUIDANCE:
"This tool is the critical bridge between the beer you have in your kettle and the beer you planned on paper.
On brew day, variables like humidity and boil vigor can leave you with wort that is either dangerously concentrated or disappointingly dilute.
Use this calculator to correct the trajectory of your brew before fermentation begins."
Precision adjustments for the brew day
Even on the best systems, boil-off rates vary.
This tool helps you perform the two most critical "saves" in brewing:
Dilution (when your gravity is too high) and Boil-Off Calculation (when you need to concentrate your wort).
Operating Procedure
A 3-Step Guide to Correction
Capture The Data
Take a sample of your wort. Cool it to the calibration temperature of your hydrometer.
Accurately read the volume in your kettle.
Determine The Path
If gravity is too high, select "Dilution Fix".
If gravity is too low, select "Boil-Off Forecast".
Execute & Verify
Add the sterile water or boil down to the target volume.
Stir thoroughly, then take a second reading to confirm.
When Adding Water (Dilution)
"The water you add is an ingredient. If you dilute post-boil, you must use sterile, deoxygenated water.
Adding tap water introduces chlorine and wild yeast."
When Boiling Longer
"If you boil for an extra 30 minutes, your late hop additions (15 min, 5 min) must be pushed back, or you will boil off all the volatile aromatics you paid for."
From the Master Brewer's Desk
Boil off + Gravity:
A Study in Volumetric Control on Brew Day
It is the silence of the boil that deceives you.
You stand there, watching the rolling surface of the wort, smelling the pine of the hops and the biscuit of the malt, believing that creation is proceeding exactly according to the spreadsheet.
But physics is a thief. While you are smelling aromas, the atmosphere is stealing your water. We call it evaporation, but on a brew day where the numbers drift, it feels more like pickpocketing.
The issue of missing your Original Gravity (OG) is rarely a matter of bad recipe design; it is almost always a failure of volumetric control. Brewing is, at its core, the management of sugar water. We extract a specific mass of sugar from grain, and we dissolve it in a specific volume of water. The mass of sugar rarely changes once it is in the kettle—that is fixed.
But the water?
The water is fugitive.
It escapes as steam, it hides in the trub, it gets absorbed by hops. If you finish your boil with 5.5 gallons instead of 5.0, your beer is diluted. If you boil too hard and end with 4.5 gallons, your beer is concentrated.
The Danger of the "Fix"
This calculator exists because mistakes happen, but let us be clear: correction is trauma. When you use the "Boil-Off Forecast" to concentrate your wort, you are effectively cooking your beer longer than intended. This deepens the color via Maillard reactions.
It changes the isomerization of alpha acids, making the beer more bitter. A delicate Pilsner can easily turn into a darker, sharper lager if you simply "boil it until it's right" without adjusting your hop schedule.
Conversely, the "Dilution Fix" carries the risk of contamination. I have seen brewers panic, realize their gravity is 1.070 instead of 1.050, and grab the garden hose. In that moment, they have introduced chlorine (which causes medicinal off-flavors) and wild yeast (which causes gushers) into sterile wort. Dilution is a valid technique - large production breweries brew "high gravity" and dilute with deaerated water as standard practice - but it requires surgical sterility.
Prevention: The True Craft
So, how do we prevent the need for this tool? We must learn the personality of our equipment.
1. Calibrate your kettle. You cannot manage what you cannot measure. Mark your kettle volume in half-gallon increments. If you are guessing your volume, you are guessing your gravity.
2. Calculate your boil-off rate. On a dry winter day, I might lose 1.5 gallons an hour. On a humid summer day, only 0.8 gallons. Record your pre-boil volume and post-boil volume for every batch.
3. Trust the pre-boil gravity. Most brewers wait until the end of the boil to check gravity. This is too late. Check your gravity before the boil starts. If it is too low, you can boil for 90 minutes instead of 60, adjusting your hop additions accordingly. If it is too high, you can add water before the boil, sterilizing it in the process.
Gravity is the architectural blueprint of your beer. It dictates the alcohol, the mouthfeel, and the residual sweetness. When you miss your gravity, you are building a different house than the one you designed.
Use this tool when the elements conspire against you, but strive, always, to render it unnecessary through the rigor of your process.

