BU:GU Ratio Calculator

Check balance between bitterness units and gravity units in your recipe

Divides IBUs by gravity units (OG points above 1.000) to yield the Bitterness Unit to Gravity Unit ratio, a quick measure of perceived malt-versus-hop balance. Includes style guidance for ales, IPAs, and malty lagers. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

What is the BU:GU ratio?

It is IBU divided by gravity units, where gravity units = (OG − 1) × 1000. A 1.052 beer has 52 gravity units; at 40 IBU the ratio is 40 ÷ 52 ≈ 0.77. It captures how bitter a beer tastes relative to its malt sweetness.

The BU:GU ratio is a fast way to judge whether a beer recipe will taste malty, balanced, or hoppy before you brew it. It compares bitterness (IBU) against malt sweetness (gravity units), giving a single number you can match to a target style.

How it works

The ratio is simply:

BU:GU = IBU / gravity_units
gravity_units = (OG − 1) × 1000

A 1.052 wort has (1.052 − 1) × 1000 = 52 gravity units. If the recipe is 40 IBU, the ratio is 40 ÷ 52 ≈ 0.77 — an American-pale-ale balance.

The reason gravity units are used instead of the raw 1.0xx number is scale: OG values from 1.040 to 1.090 all start with “1.0”, so dividing by them gives indistinguishable results. Multiplying the decimal part to whole numbers spreads the scale into a meaningful range.

Typical style ranges

BU:GUCharacterExample styles
0.30–0.50Malty, sweetMunich helles, mild, Scottish ale
0.50–0.70BalancedAmber ale, ESB, märzen
0.70–0.90Hop-forwardAmerican pale ale, porter
0.90–1.20BitterIPA, West Coast pale
1.20+Aggressively hoppyDouble IPA, imperial pale

Worked example

You have an IPA recipe at OG 1.064 and 65 IBU:

gravity_units = (1.064 − 1) × 1000 = 64
BU:GU = 65 / 64 ≈ 1.02

A ratio just over 1.0 confirms a firmly bitter, hop-driven IPA — exactly what the style calls for. If you wanted a softer, more balanced impression you would either drop IBUs toward ~45 (ratio ~0.70) or raise the malt.

Tips and notes

  • The ratio describes perceived balance, not absolute bitterness. A big barleywine can carry 60+ IBU and still taste balanced because the malt masks it.
  • Use it as a planning sanity check: if your numbers fall far outside the target style band, revisit the hop schedule or grain bill before brew day.
  • It pairs naturally with an IBU calculator (compute IBU first, then check balance here) and with finished-gravity tools for full recipe profiling.