Simple Syrup Calculator
Kitchen tool

Simple syrup calculator


Sugar needed
200
grams
Water needed
200
grams / ml
Yield (approx.)
~320
ml / grams
Yield in cups
~1.35
cups
Ratio summary
200g sugar + 200ml water → ~320ml syrup

Tip: For a 1:1 syrup, combine equal parts sugar and water by weight, heat on medium stirring until the sugar fully dissolves. Do not boil. Cool before bottling. Keeps refrigerated for up to 4 weeks.

Why use a simple syrup calculator?

The math behind simple syrup calculator

Simple syrup ratios are always expressed as parts sugar to parts water, measured by weight rather than volume for best accuracy.

  • 1:1 simple syrup — one gram of sugar for every gram of water. This is the standard ratio used in most cocktail recipes and coffee shops. It dissolves easily, stores well for up to four weeks refrigerated, and adds gentle sweetness without dominating a drink.
  • 2:1 rich syrup — two grams of sugar for every gram of water. Twice the sweetness in half the volume. Because you’re adding less liquid to your recipe, rich syrup is preferred when you want to sweeten without diluting — common in spirit-forward cocktails like an Old Fashioned or a Daiquiri. It also keeps longer, up to six weeks, because the higher sugar concentration inhibits microbial growth.
  • 1:2 light syrup — one gram of sugar for every two grams of water. A gentler sweetener, useful for poaching fruit, making flavored sodas, or sweetening drinks for people watching their sugar intake.

Why the yield is less than the sum of the parts: when sugar dissolves into water, the sugar molecules occupy space within the water structure rather than simply adding to it. A 1:1 batch made with 200g sugar and 200g water yields roughly 320ml of syrup, not 400ml. This sugar syrup calculator accounts for that, giving you an accurate yield estimate so you can plan your storage containers and recipe volumes properly.

Getting accurate results

Weigh your ingredients

A cup of sugar can range from 190g to 240g depending on how it’s packed. A scale eliminates that variable entirely.

Cool completely before bottling

Sealing warm syrup traps steam, which dilutes the batch and shortens shelf life.

chai syrup in a glass bottle

Don’t boil

Simmer gently and stir until the sugar dissolves. Boiling drives off water, throwing off your ratio and risking crystallization.

Label everything

1:1 and 2:1 syrups are identical in a bottle. Write the ratio and date before you forget.

Related syrup conversions

  • Sugar syrup for beekeeping: Beekeepers use sugar syrup to supplement feeding during nectar dearths or to help new colonies build comb. A 1:1 sugar-to-water syrup (by weight) is used in spring to stimulate brood rearing, while a 2:1 ratio is used in fall to help bees build winter stores. This calculator works for both — just enter your sugar weight and select the appropriate ratio.
  • Sap to syrup: Maple sap and simple syrup are different products — maple sap requires boiling down rather than dissolving — but if you’re sweetening a recipe with maple syrup instead of simple syrup, the general substitution is to use three-quarters the amount of maple syrup and reduce the other liquids in your recipe slightly to compensate for the extra moisture.
  • Limoncello simple syrup ratio: Traditional limoncello uses a 1:1 simple syrup added to infused grain alcohol. Some recipes call for a slightly lighter syrup to let the lemon flavor come through more clearly. Use this calculator to batch your syrup precisely, then adjust the syrup-to-spirit ratio to taste.

FAQs

Simple syrup is made from two ingredients: granulated white sugar and water. The standard ratio is equal parts by weight (1:1), though richer versions use twice as much sugar as water (2:1)

Yes. Brown sugar syrup follows the same ratio and process as regular simple syrup — the result is darker and has a mild molasses flavor. Honey syrup is typically made at a 1:1 ratio by dissolving honey into warm (not boiling) water, since honey is already liquid. Demerara syrup, made from raw cane sugar, is popular in cocktails for its light caramel note.

The weight ratio stays the same regardless of sugar type, but finer sugars like caster sugar dissolve faster and more completely than coarse varieties. Coarser sugars may require slightly more heat or stirring time to fully dissolve.

1:1 simple syrup is the most versatile ratio. It’s used in cocktails, mocktails, iced coffee, lemonade, flavored sodas, cake glazes, fruit salads, and poaching liquids. Because it’s not overly sweet, it blends easily without overpowering other flavors.

2:1 rich syrup is commonly used in spirit-forward cocktails, flavored syrups where you want intense sweetness in a small volume, and any recipe where adding too much liquid would affect the final result.