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Coffee Brewing Ratios and Grind Size Chart (All Methods Explained)

coffee grind size

This chart is designed to help you fix bitter, sour, weak, or muddy coffee…

coffee grind size

Accurate coffee brewing ratios, grind sizes, and timing for every major method so you can brew better coffee at home — whether you love espresso, pour-over, French press, AeroPress, drip, cold brew, or a Moka pot.

This chart is designed to help you fix bitter, sour, weak, or muddy coffee by adjusting ratios, grind size, and brew time in a controlled, repeatable way instead of guessing.

How this guide was developed

The ratios and grind size ranges in this guide are based on standard extraction theory, common home brewing practices, and consistency testing across espresso, immersion, and drip methods. These numbers are designed as reliable starting points, not rigid rules.

How to Use This Coffee Brewing Reference Guide

Use this page to:

Coffee Brewing Basics That Affect Every Method

Why Brewing Ratio Matters

The brewing ratio is the relationship between the weight of coffee grounds and the amount of water used. This balance directly controls strength and extraction. Ratios that are too weak can produce thin, hollow coffee, while ratios that are too strong can lead to bitter, over-extracted flavors.

New to ratios and measuring by weight? Coffee-to-Water Ratios Explained for Beginners shows how to pick a starting ratio and adjust strength without throwing off flavor.

For example, espresso uses a tight coffee-to-water ratio and a fine grind to extract concentrated flavor in under 30 seconds, while French press relies on a looser ratio and a coarse grind to prevent over-extraction during a longer, four-minute immersion.

Reference: SCA Coffee Standards

Why Grind Size Changes Flavor

Grind size controls how quickly water extracts flavor from coffee by changing the total surface area exposed during brewing. Finer grinds increase surface area, causing faster extraction and more intense flavors, while coarser grinds slow extraction and reduce the risk of bitterness during longer brew times.

For example, espresso requires a fine grind to extract fully in under 30 seconds, while immersion methods like French press use a coarse grind to maintain balance during several minutes of contact with water.

The best results come from adjusting grind size, brewing ratio, and brew time together, rather than changing one variable in isolation.

If you’re not sure whether to change grind size or brew time first, use this breakdown on how they affect extraction differently. Read Brew Time vs Grind Size to make the fastest fix without guessing.

Brew Time and Extraction Balance

Brew time determines how long water interacts with coffee grounds, directly influencing extraction and flavor balance. Each brewing method has an optimal time window designed to extract desirable compounds while limiting harsh or bitter flavors.

Reference: SCA Gold Cup Standard

If brew time is too short, extraction is incomplete and coffee can taste sour or under-developed. If brew time runs too long, over-extraction occurs, often resulting in bitterness, dryness, or a hollow finish.

Together, brewing ratio, grind size, and brew time form the foundation of balanced extraction across all coffee brewing methods.

Use the charts below as a quick reference, then fine-tune based on taste using the troubleshooting sections further down the page.

Coffee Brewing Ratio and Grind Size Chart (Quick Reference)

Brewing Ratio Chart (Coffee to Water)

Brew MethodCoffee to Water RatioExample (20g Coffee)
Espresso1:220g → 40g liquid
Pour-Over1:15–1:1720g → 300–340g water
French Press1:12–1:1520g → 240–300g water
AeroPress1:10–1:1720g → 200–340g water
Drip Coffee1:1620g → 320g water
Cold Brew1:5–1:8 (concentrate)100g → 500–800g water
Moka Pot~1:10 (approximate)20g → 200g water

Note: These ratios are starting points. Small changes in grind size, brew time, or coffee dose will affect strength, balance, and flavor clarity.

Coffee Grind Size Chart

Brew MethodGrind SizeTexture Reference
EspressoFinePowdered sugar
Pour-OverMedium-FineTable salt
French PressCoarseBreadcrumbs
AeroPressFine–MediumSand to salt
Drip CoffeeMediumRegular sand
Cold BrewExtra-CoarseCracked peppercorns
Moka PotFine–MediumSlightly coarser than espresso

Note: Grind size descriptions refer to texture rather than grinder numbers, since settings vary by grinder brand, burr design, and calibration.

Brew Time Guidelines by Method

Brew MethodBrew Time
Espresso25–30 seconds
Pour-Over2:30–4:00
French Press4:00
AeroPress1:30–3:00
Drip Coffee4–6 minutes
Cold Brew12–24 hours
Moka Pot4–6 minutes

Note: Brew times are general guidelines. Grind size, brewing ratio, roast level, and water temperature can shift ideal extraction times slightly for each method.

Common Coffee Brewing Mistakes by Method

Espresso

Espresso is highly sensitive to grind size and timing, which makes small adjustments critical for balanced extraction.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

Explore more

Pour-Over

Pour-over brewing relies on controlled water flow and even extraction, making grind size, pouring technique, and bloom time especially important for clarity and balance.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

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French Press

French press brewing is an immersion method that depends on a coarse grind and gentle handling, making grind size, agitation, and plunge speed key factors for a clean, balanced cup.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

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AeroPress

AeroPress brewing offers flexibility and speed, but balanced extraction depends on controlled pressure, water temperature, and steep time.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

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Drip Coffee

Drip coffee relies on consistent water distribution and the correct grind size to achieve even extraction, making grind uniformity and basket flow key factors for balanced flavor.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

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Cold Brew

Cold brew uses long immersion and low temperatures, which makes grind size, steep time, and dilution especially important for producing a smooth, balanced concentrate.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

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Moka Pot

Moka pot brewing uses steam pressure and direct heat, making grind size, heat control, and timing critical for avoiding bitterness and burnt flavors.

Common Mistakes

Troubleshooting

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Coffee Taste Troubleshooting Guide

Sour Coffee (Under-Extracted)

Sour flavors usually indicate the coffee hasn’t extracted long enough.

Bitter Coffee (Over-Extracted)

Bitterness often comes from extracting too much, too quickly, or for too long.

Weak Coffee

Weak coffee is typically a strength issue rather than a flavor defect.

Muddy or Flat Flavor

Muddy or dull cups usually come from excess fines or prolonged extraction.

Method Guides on Brewed Within

Explore each brewing style in more detail with these internal guides:

Why These Ratios and Grinds Are Guidelines, Not Rules

Coffee extraction is influenced by multiple variables, including:

These charts are designed to provide reliable starting points, not rigid constraints. Small adjustments based on taste and equipment will always lead to better results.

FAQs

The most common starting point is a 1:16 ratio, meaning 1 gram of coffee for every 16 grams of water. This works well for drip coffee and pour-over. Other methods like espresso, French press, and cold brew require different ratios based on extraction style

Bitter coffee is usually caused by over-extraction, not just ratio. Common reasons include grinding too fine, brewing too long, or using water that is too hot. Adjust grind size first before changing the ratio.

Sour coffee is a sign of under-extraction. This often happens when the grind is too coarse, brew time is too short, or not enough coffee is used. Grinding slightly finer is usually the fastest fix.

If coffee tastes balanced, clean, and sweet, the grind size is likely correct.
If it tastes sour, the grind is usually too coarse.
If it tastes bitter or dry, the grind is often too fine.

Matching grind size to the brewing method is more important than chasing exact ratios.

Grind size has a larger impact on flavor than ratio in most cases. Even a perfect ratio will taste off if the grind size is wrong. Ratio controls strength, while grind size controls extraction.

Measuring by weight is more accurate. Scoops vary based on grind size, roast level, and bean density. Using a scale ensures consistent brewing results across different coffees and methods.

Pour-over coffee works best with a medium-fine grind, similar to table salt. This allows proper flow while maintaining enough contact time for balanced extraction.

Muddy French press coffee is usually caused by grinding too fine or pressing the plunger too quickly. A coarse grind and slow plunge help reduce sediment and bitterness.

No. Brewing ratios are guidelines, not fixed rules. Bean origin, roast level, grinder quality, and personal taste all influence the final result. Ratios provide a reliable starting point that you can adjust based on flavor.

No. Each brewing method extracts coffee differently. Espresso, immersion, and drip brewing all require different ratios and grind sizes to achieve balanced flavor.

Final Brewed Within tips

If your coffee doesn’t taste right, adjust only one variable at a time. Start with grind size, then fine-tune brew time, and change the coffee-to-water ratio last. Small, controlled adjustments lead to better, more consistent results.

Related Coffee Brewing Guides

Deepen your understanding of brewing fundamentals with these supporting guides:

Table of Contents

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