Beer Calories & Carbs Calculator

Estimate calories and carbohydrates per serving from OG and FG

Uses the standard ASBC formulas to compute calories from alcohol and residual extract, plus estimated carbohydrates per serving, from original and final gravity. Useful for homebrewers tracking nutritional content. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

How are beer calories calculated?

The ASBC formula splits calories into two parts: from alcohol = 1881.22 × FG × (OG − FG) ÷ (1.775 − OG), and from residual carbohydrates = 3550 × FG × ((0.1808 × OG) + (0.8192 × FG) − 1.0004). Adding them gives calories per 12 oz, which is then scaled to your serving.

This calculator estimates how many calories and carbohydrates are in a serving of your beer, using the standard ASBC (American Society of Brewing Chemists) formulas. Enter the original and final gravity, pick a serving size, and it returns calories, carbs, and ABV.

How it works

Beer calories come from two sources: alcohol and residual carbohydrate (unfermented extract). The ASBC formulas, per 12 oz (355 mL), are:

cal_alcohol = 1881.22 × FG × (OG − FG) / (1.775 − OG)
cal_carbs   = 3550 × FG × ((0.1808 × OG) + (0.8192 × FG) − 1.0004)
calories    = cal_alcohol + cal_carbs

ABV is derived from the gravity drop:

ABV% = (OG − FG) × 131.25

Carbohydrate grams per 12 oz are estimated from the residual real extract — the same extract term used in the carbohydrate-calorie equation — converted to grams of carbohydrate.

The tool computes everything per 12 oz first, then scales linearly to whatever serving size you choose.

Worked example

A standard pale ale: OG 1.050, FG 1.010, served as 12 oz.

  • ABV = (1.050 − 1.010) × 131.25 ≈ 5.25%
  • cal_alcohol = 1881.22 × 1.010 × 0.040 ÷ (1.775 − 1.050) ≈ 1881.22 × 1.010 × 0.040 ÷ 0.725 ≈ 104.8
  • cal_carbs = 3550 × 1.010 × ((0.1808 × 1.050) + (0.8192 × 1.010) − 1.0004) ≈ 3550 × 1.010 × 0.0274 ≈ 98.3 (varies with rounding)
  • Total ≈ 170–175 calories per 12 oz — typical for a 5% ale.

Tips and notes

  • Dry beers have fewer carb calories. A low FG means more sugar fermented to alcohol, so two beers at the same ABV can differ noticeably in total calories.
  • The formulas assume no post-fermentation additions. Priming sugar, lactose, fruit, or adjuncts will shift the real numbers — treat the output as a close estimate for standard all-malt beers.
  • Serving size scales linearly. A pint (16 oz) is simply the 12 oz figure times 16 ÷ 12; the tool handles this for the common sizes.
  • For label-grade nutrition you would need lab analysis, but for homebrew tracking these ASBC numbers are the accepted standard.