Priming Sugar Calculator

Calculate the exact amount of priming sugar needed to carbonate your beer, cider, or mead perfectly. Get precise measurements based on batch size, temperature, and styleβ€”so every bottle pours just right.

Batch Details
Tip: Enter the highest temperature your beer reached during fermentation, not the current serving or cellar temp. That value determines how much CO₂ is already dissolved.
gallons
°F
Carbonation Target
Tip: Pick a style for its classic CO₂ level, or set your own. Higher CO₂ is fizzier and needs stronger bottles.
Beverage
Category
vols
Sugar Type Corn Sugar (Dextrose)
4.2 oz
119 grams
Corn Sugar (Dextrose)
Still Medium High Wild
Medium carbonation. Standard for most ales and lagers.
2.4
Target
Volumes
0.83
Residual
In Beer
+1.57
CO₂ To Add
Volumes
Safe for standard pry-off bottles.
Partial Batch Priming

Only priming part of your batch? Slide to the portion you're carbonating. The rest stays uncarbonated (for kegging or non-carbonated meads).

100%
Per-Bottle Priming

Adding sugar directly to each bottle instead of bulk priming? Here's the per-bottle dose for your selected sugar, plus the equivalent in Coopers-style carbonation drops (~3.3 g each).

12 oz
16 oz
22 oz
500 ml
750 ml
Force Carbonation (Keg)

Kegging instead? Set your keg temperature for the PSI needed to hit your target CO₂ volumes. Hold this pressure for 7–10 days for full carbonation, or use the "set and forget" method.

°F
11 PSI
for 2.4 vols
About the Formula

Residual CO₂ is calculated from your beer temp using the Zahm & Nagel equation, the standard across commercial and craft brewing. Sugar conversion factors come from molecular weight ratios (fermentable sugar to CO₂) adjusted for typical moisture content. Corn sugar (dextrose) is the 1.00 baseline at 4.2 g/L per volume of CO₂, matching Palmer's How to Brew reference tables.

About Priming Sugar
What are CO₂ volumes?

One "volume" of CO₂ means one liter of gas dissolved per liter of liquid at standard conditions. Most American beers sit around 2.4–2.6 vols; British cask ales are closer to 1.5; German hefeweizens hit 3.5+.

Why temperature matters

Beer already holds dissolved CO₂, and the colder it was, the more it holds. Use a temperature that's too cold and you'll underprime and end up with flat beer. Use the highest temp your beer reached during fermentation.

Bottle safety

Standard pry-off bottles are rated to about 3.0 volumes. Push past that and you risk bottle bombs. Hefeweizens, Belgian styles, and sodas need thick-walled, flip-top, or champagne bottles. This calculator flags each threshold above.

Common mistakes

Using serving temp instead of fermentation temp. Forgetting to boil the sugar in water first. Not stirring the sugar evenly through the batch. Bottling before final gravity is truly stable for 2–3 days.

Residual CO₂ uses the Zahm & Nagel equation. Sugar conversion factors derived from fermentable sugar content and molecular weight. 1 CO₂ volume = 1.96 g/L of dissolved gas; corn sugar baseline is 4.2 g/L per volume of CO₂, matching Palmer's How to Brew tables.

Dial In Perfect Carbonation Every Time

Priming sugar is what gives your finished brew its carbonation. By adding a measured amount of sugar before bottling, you allow yeast to produce COβ‚‚ inside the bottleβ€”creating that signature fizz, mouthfeel, and head retention.

This calculator removes the guesswork by accounting for your batch size, fermentation temperature, and target COβ‚‚ levelsβ€”so you can carbonate with confidence.

If you’re still brewing your recipe, try our Beer Recipe Builder to design your batch from the start.

How Priming Sugar Works

After fermentation, a small amount of yeast remains active. When you add priming sugar:

  • Yeast consumes the added sugar
  • COβ‚‚ is produced and trapped in the bottle
  • Carbonation builds naturally over time

The key is adding the right amountβ€”too little results in flat beer, while too much can lead to overcarbonation or even bottle failure.

Choosing the Right Carbonation Level

Different styles call for different carbonation levels (measured in COβ‚‚ volumes):

  • Low (1.5–2.0 vols): British ales, stouts
  • Medium (2.2–2.6 vols): Pale ales, lagers (most common)
  • High (2.7–3.5+ vols): Wheat beers, Belgian styles, some ciders

Use the style presets in the calculator or customize your own target to match your preferences.

Priming Sugar Options Explained

Not all sugars behave the same. This calculator supports multiple options so you can tailor flavor and fermentation:

  • Corn Sugar (Dextrose): Clean, neutral, most common
  • Table Sugar (Sucrose): Slightly more efficient per gram
  • Dry Malt Extract (DME): Adds subtle malt character
  • Honey / Maple Syrup: Adds light flavor complexity
  • Belgian Candi Sugar / Molasses: Style-specific flavor additions

Looking to experiment? Browse our brewing ingredients to try different priming options.

Why Temperature Matters

Beer already contains dissolved COβ‚‚ from fermentationβ€”and colder beer holds more gas. That’s why this calculator uses the highest temperature your beer reached during fermentation, not serving temperature.

Using the wrong temperature can lead to:

  • Undercarbonation (too little sugar added)
  • Overcarbonation (too much sugar added)

Bottle Safety & Best Practices

Carbonation happens under pressureβ€”so proper technique matters:

  • Use bottles rated for your target COβ‚‚ level
  • Avoid exceeding ~3.0 volumes in standard beer bottles
  • Mix priming sugar evenly into your batch before bottling
  • Always confirm fermentation is complete before packaging

Need supplies? Check out our bottling and brewing equipment.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Using serving temperature instead of fermentation temperature
  • Not dissolving priming sugar in water before adding
  • Uneven mixing leading to inconsistent carbonation
  • Bottling before final gravity is stable

If you're unsure about your fermentation, use our ABV Calculator to confirm your readings.

Take Your Brewing Further

Once you’ve mastered carbonation, you can refine every part of your process:

Ready to Bottle Your Batch?

Use your calculated sugar amount, bottle carefully, and give your brew time to condition. In just a few weeks, you’ll have perfectly carbonated beer ready to enjoy.