Cost per Cup Calculator
Calculate the true cost of your daily coffee across different brewing methods. Factor in beans, water, filters, electricity, and equipment amortization. Compare home brewing costs vs coffee shop prices.
CalculatorYour Coffee Costs
vs Cafe Comparison
How to Use
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1
Enter your coffee purchase details
Input the weight and price of your coffee purchase. The calculator works in any currency and supports common bag sizes from 100g to 1kg. For the most accurate comparison, use the actual gram weight on the bag rather than the nominal size, as some specialty bags are 250g vs. the standard 227g (8oz).
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2
Set your brew ratio and serving size
Enter your typical dose in grams per cup and your expected serving volume. The calculator applies your actual brew ratio to determine cost per gram of coffee used, then multiplies by your dose to get cost per serving. Different methods with different doses give meaningfully different per-cup costs from the same bag.
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3
Compare to your coffee shop benchmark
Enter your typical coffee shop spend for comparison. The calculator shows how many home-brewed cups cover the cost of a single café purchase, and your annualized home brewing savings based on your consumption frequency. This context helps calibrate the value of equipment investments.
About
The Cost Calculator makes the economics of specialty home brewing transparent, converting bag prices and brew ratios into actual per-cup costs you can compare against café spending. Coffee is one of the few daily pleasures where the home version, made with care and quality ingredients, can genuinely rival or exceed café quality at a fraction of the price. Understanding the actual numbers helps justify equipment investments, choose between coffee sources, and track how your brewing habits affect your coffee budget.
The calculation methodology matters for accuracy. Cost per cup depends on your actual dose in grams (not tablespoons, which vary with grind size and density), your brew ratio, and the gram price of your coffee. Most people significantly overestimate their per-cup cost when measuring by volume and underestimate when thinking about premium-tier coffees. The calculator eliminates this ambiguity by working in weight-based inputs that correspond directly to extraction reality — the same inputs used by specialty roasters when pricing their products.
SCA cupping score data provides important context for cost comparisons: the quality gap between an 85-point specialty coffee at $20 per 250g and a commodity ground coffee at $8 per 250g is enormous by sensory standards, while the per-cup price difference is often less than $0.50. This asymmetry — large quality improvement for small cost difference — is the fundamental economic case for specialty home brewing. The calculator helps you find where on that value curve your current setup falls and what changes would give you the best return on your coffee investment.