Coffee Extraction Yield Calculator
Calculate your extraction yield from TDS readings and check it against the SCA Golden Cup standard.
How to Use This Coffee Extraction Calculator
- Measure your TDS — use a coffee refractometer to read the Total Dissolved Solids percentage from your brewed coffee. If you do not have a refractometer, start with a typical value (1.15-1.35% for drip, 8-10% for espresso).
- Enter your beverage weight — weigh the final brewed coffee in grams (excluding grounds). For a single pour-over cup, this is typically 250-350g.
- Enter your coffee dose — the dry weight of ground coffee used, in grams.
- Select your brew method — this provides context-specific guidance for adjusting your technique.
Understanding Coffee Extraction
Coffee extraction is the process of dissolving soluble compounds from roasted coffee grounds into water. A roasted coffee bean contains roughly 28-30% soluble material by weight — the rest is insoluble cellulose fiber. However, not all of those solubles taste pleasant. The art of brewing is dissolving the right amount: enough to capture sweetness, acidity, and body, but not so much that you pull out the bitter, astringent, and ashy compounds that dissolve last.
The Extraction Yield Formula
Extraction yield quantifies what fraction of the dry coffee grounds actually dissolved into your brew:
EY = (TDS × Beverage Weight) / Coffee Dose
Where EY = extraction yield (%), TDS = total dissolved solids (%), Beverage Weight = mass of brewed coffee (g), and Coffee Dose = mass of dry grounds (g).
What TDS Tells You
TDS measures the strength (concentration) of your brew — how much dissolved coffee is in each sip. The SCA recommends 1.15-1.35% TDS for drip coffee. Espresso is much stronger at 7-12% TDS. TDS alone does not tell you if the coffee is well-extracted; you need to combine it with the brew ratio to calculate extraction yield.
The SCA Golden Cup Standard
The Specialty Coffee Association defines the Golden Cup standard as coffee brewed with an extraction yield of 18-22% and a TDS of 1.15-1.35%. These ranges were established through decades of sensory research showing that most people prefer coffee within these parameters. Below 18%, the brew tends to be sour and underdeveloped. Above 22%, it becomes bitter and astringent.
How Grind Size, Water Temperature, and Time Affect Extraction
Grind size is the most powerful variable. Finer grinds expose more surface area, increasing extraction rate. If your coffee is under-extracted, grind finer. If over-extracted, grind coarser. Water temperature accelerates extraction — the SCA recommends 92-96°C (197-205°F). Cold brew uses room temperature or cold water but compensates with 12-24 hours of steeping time. Brew time is the total contact time between water and grounds. Longer contact means more extraction. Pour-over takes 3-4 minutes, French press 4-5 minutes, and espresso just 25-30 seconds at high pressure.
Brew Method Differences
Espresso uses high pressure (9 bar) and a fine grind to achieve a concentrated brew in under 30 seconds. A typical shot is 18g dose yielding 36g of liquid at 8-10% TDS. Pour over uses gravity and a medium grind with a brew time of 3-4 minutes. French press is full immersion with a coarse grind, producing a heavier body due to the metal mesh filter allowing oils and fines through. AeroPress is versatile, supporting both immersion and pressure techniques. Cold brew extracts slowly at low temperatures, yielding a smooth, low-acid concentrate.