Mash efficiency

Calculate the percentage of theoretical sugar yield your mash actually extracted, used to size grain bills for future batches.

Formula

Efficiency_% = (Actual_gravity_points × Batch_volume_gal) ÷ (Sum_of_grain_yield_points) × 100
where each grain contributes:  weight_lb × ppg(yield)

Inputs

NameUnitDescription
SG-Post-boil specific gravity
V_galUS galPost-boil batch volume
ppgpoints/lb/galMaximum possible yield of each grain (Maris Otter ≈ 38, Crystal 60 ≈ 34, Chocolate ≈ 28)
W_lblbWeight of each grain

Outputs

NameUnitDescription
efficiency%Actual extract efficiency. Use this to scale future grain bills to your equipment.

Worked example

Inputs:

  • maris_otter_lb = 11.9
  • maris_otter_ppg = 38
  • crystal_60_lb = 0.9
  • crystal_60_ppg = 34
  • measured_OG = 1.058
  • batch_gal = 5

Calculation:

Theoretical points = (11.9 × 38) + (0.9 × 34) = 452.2 + 30.6 = 482.8 Actual points = (1.058 − 1) × 1000 × 5 = 290 Efficiency = 290 ÷ 482.8 × 100 = 60.1%

Result:

60% mash efficiency — lower than ideal; check crush, mash temp and sparge

Sample values

Brew systemTypical efficiency
No-sparge BIAB, coarse crush60-65%
BIAB, fine crush, mash-out70-75%
Batch sparge, 3-vessel72-78%
Fly sparge, 3-vessel, well-tuned80-85%
Commercial brewery (reference)88-92%

Why this matters

If you don’t know your efficiency, you can’t size a recipe accurately. A recipe printed at 75% efficiency will undershoot OG by 20 gravity points on a system actually running 60% — that’s the difference between a 5% bitter and a 3.5% one.

How to improve

In rough order of impact:

  1. Crush. A finer crush exposes more starch surface to enzymes. If your homebrew shop’s mill is set coarse, ask for a closer setting or buy your own mill.
  2. Mash duration. A 60-minute mash is the minimum for full conversion. Iodine-test the wort if in doubt (black-blue colour means starch remains).
  3. Sparge volume and temperature. Hotter (76-78 °C) and slower sparges extract more. Don’t exceed 78 °C or you’ll extract tannins.
  4. Recirculate the first runnings. Vorlauf (slowly drain and pour back) clears the grain bed and adds 1-3% efficiency.

When to stop optimising

If you’re consistently at 70-75% on a homebrew system, that’s healthy. Chasing 85% requires equipment changes (proper sparge arm, pumps, recirculation). The energy is better spent on recipe iteration.

Learn more

See in action